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      "path": "/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
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      "topic": "biomarkers",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Overtraining Score Claims | HRV, Cortisol, CK, Sleep, Performance, and Recovery Metrics",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 123,
      "title": "Consumer Oxidative Stress Panel Claims | Free Radicals, Antioxidants, and Test Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 7
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      "position": 124,
      "title": "Consumer oxygen adaptation score claims | altitude, SpO2, VO2, wearables, and limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 125,
      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Capacity Score Claims | VO2 Max, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Debt Score Claims | Wearables, Exercise Recovery, VO2, CPET, Lactate, and Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VO2, CPET, Pulse Oximetry, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
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      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Load Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Recovery, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
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      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Load Score Claims | Recovery, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Limits",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, VO2 Recovery, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Strain Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Safety Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Oxygen Utilization Score Claims | VO2, CPET, SpO2, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
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      "title": "Consumer Pesticide Exposure Panel Claims | Urine Metabolites, Biomonitoring, and Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
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      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Recovery Debt Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep Debt, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Recovery Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
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      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Respiratory Capacity Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Lung Function, VO2, and Validation Limits",
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      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Respiratory Efficiency Score Claims | CPET, Breathing Rate, SpO2, VO2, and Validation Limits",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Respiratory Fitness Score Claims | VO2 Max, Breathing Rate, Pulse Ox, and Validation Limits",
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      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Burden Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
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      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
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      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
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      "path": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
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      "title": "Consumer Sleep Debt Score Claims | Sleep Duration, Circadian Timing, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Sweat Electrolyte Score Claims | Hydration, Sodium Loss, Sports Use, Validation, and Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Consumer Vagal Tone Score Claims | HRV, Parasympathetic Activity, Stress, Recovery, and Wearable Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
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      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing",
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      "path": "/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "path": "/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
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      "topicName": "STI and STD testing",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 487,
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      "path": "/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
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      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing",
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      "topicName": "Blood tests",
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      "title": "Teardrop Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Dacrocytes, Myelofibrosis, Marrow Infiltration, Anemia, and Follow-Up",
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      "path": "/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 7
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      "title": "Telomere biology disorder genetic testing | Dyskeratosis congenita, short telomeres, marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and family screening",
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      "path": "/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
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      "path": "/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
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      "title": "Thrombin Time and Reptilase Time Testing | Heparin, Fibrinogen, Dysfibrinogenemia, and Prolonged Clotting",
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      "path": "/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
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      "topicName": "Blood tests",
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      "topic": "blood",
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      "title": "TMEM127 Genetic Testing | Pheochromocytoma, Cluster 2, Family Follow-Up, and Surveillance",
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      "path": "/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "path": "/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Trichomoniasis Testing | Why Trich May Be Missing From STI Panels",
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      "path": "/articles/trichomoniasis-testing.html",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing",
      "questionCount": 2
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      "path": "/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
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      "questionCount": 7
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      "title": "Troponin Blood Test Guide | High Troponin, Heart Attack, High-Sensitivity Results",
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      "path": "/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "topic": "blood",
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      "questionCount": 5
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      "title": "Trypanosoma brucei testing | African sleeping sickness, travel exposure, and CSF",
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      "path": "/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
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      "title": "TSC1/TSC2 genetic testing | tuberous sclerosis, mosaicism, and family follow-up",
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      "title": "TSH Thyroid Blood Test Guide | High, Low, Free T4, T3, Antibodies, and Biotin",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "path": "/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 4
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    {
      "position": 505,
      "title": "Tumor Genomic Testing vs Inherited Genetic Testing | Somatic, Germline, Biomarkers, and Family Risk",
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      "topicName": "Genetics",
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      "title": "Urinalysis Test Guide | Dipstick, Microscopy, UTI, Kidney, Glucose, Protein, Blood, and Ketones",
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      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 5
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    {
      "position": 507,
      "title": "Urine Albumin-to-Creatinine Ratio (UACR) | Albuminuria, Kidney Disease, Diabetes, and Repeat Testing",
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      "path": "/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 508,
      "title": "Urine culture test | bacteria, contamination, sensitivity, and follow-up",
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      "path": "/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 509,
      "title": "Urine Protein-to-Creatinine Ratio | UPCR, Proteinuria, Kidney Disease, and UACR",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "path": "/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 510,
      "title": "UTI Test vs STI Test | Urinalysis, Urine Culture, and STI NAATs",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/uti-test-vs-sti-test.html",
      "path": "/articles/uti-test-vs-sti-test.html",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing",
      "questionCount": 2
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      "title": "Vaginal Microbiome Testing | BV, Yeast, STI Panels, and Consumer Reports",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "path": "/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
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      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing",
      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 512,
      "title": "VHL Genetic Testing | Hemangioblastomas, Kidney Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Screening",
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      "path": "/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 513,
      "title": "VHL vs SDHx paraganglioma genetic testing",
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      "path": "/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics",
      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 514,
      "title": "Vibrio Stool Test | Seafood Exposure, Culture, PCR, and Severe Risk",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "path": "/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing",
      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 515,
      "title": "Vitamin B12 and Folate Blood Test | Deficiency, Anemia, and Results",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "path": "/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 516,
      "title": "Vitamin D Blood Test Guide | 25(OH)D, Deficiency, Toxicity, Supplements, and Screening Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "path": "/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 4
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    {
      "position": 517,
      "title": "VO2 Max and Fitness Estimates | Wearables, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Lab Testing",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "path": "/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 518,
      "title": "von Willebrand Factor Testing | VWD, Bleeding, Platelet Function, Factor VIII, and Repeat Testing",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "path": "/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Wearable Glucose Monitoring Claims | Smartwatches, Rings, CGM, FDA Warnings, and Limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "path": "/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 520,
      "title": "Wearable Heart Rate Variability Guide | HRV trends, recovery scores, and limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "path": "/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 521,
      "title": "Wearable Hydration and Sweat Testing | Sweat Rate, Electrolytes, CF Sweat Chloride, and Accuracy Limits",
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      "path": "/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 522,
      "title": "Wearable Oxygen Saturation and Respiratory Rate | Pulse Ox, Skin Tone, and Accuracy",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "path": "/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 523,
      "title": "Wearable Stress Scores | HRV, heart rate, EDA, cortisol, and accuracy limits",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "path": "/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "High White Blood Cell Count | Leukocytosis, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes, Infection, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "path": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests",
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      "path": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "topic": "blood",
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      "questionCount": 6
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      "title": "Whole genome sequencing reports | variants, VUS, and privacy",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
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      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics",
      "questionCount": 6
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      "position": 527,
      "title": "Yersinia Stool Test | Culture, PCR Panels, CIN Agar, and Pseudoappendicitis",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "path": "/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "topic": "microbiome",
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      "questionCount": 6
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    {
      "position": 528,
      "title": "STI and STD Testing Guide | Who Should Test, Where to Go, and What to Ask",
      "url": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/topics/sti-std-testing.html",
      "path": "/topics/sti-std-testing.html",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing",
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  "questions": [
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      "position": 1,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an A1C test measure?",
      "answer": "An A1C test measures the percentage of hemoglobin in red blood cells that has glucose attached. Because red blood cells live for a while, the result reflects average blood glucose over roughly the past two to three months.",
      "pageTitle": "A1C Blood Test Guide | Diabetes, Prediabetes, HbA1c Results, Fasting, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
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      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do you need to fast before an A1C test?",
      "answer": "No. The A1C test itself usually does not require fasting, although other tests ordered the same day may have different preparation instructions.",
      "pageTitle": "A1C Blood Test Guide | Diabetes, Prediabetes, HbA1c Results, Fasting, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
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      "question": "Does one high A1C result prove diabetes?",
      "answer": "Often not by itself. A diabetes-range A1C may need repeat confirmation or another diabetes test unless symptoms and the full clinical picture already make the diagnosis clear.",
      "pageTitle": "A1C Blood Test Guide | Diabetes, Prediabetes, HbA1c Results, Fasting, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
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      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why can A1C disagree with glucose readings?",
      "answer": "A1C is affected by red blood cell biology, so anemia, hemoglobin variants, recent blood loss, transfusion, pregnancy, kidney disease, and some treatments can make it disagree with glucose or CGM data.",
      "pageTitle": "A1C Blood Test Guide | Diabetes, Prediabetes, HbA1c Results, Fasting, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 5,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should happen if A1C and glucose do not match?",
      "answer": "ADA advises checking for a possible problem or interference and, when the A1C-glycemia relationship is altered, using plasma glucose criteria instead of A1C to diagnose diabetes.",
      "pageTitle": "A1C Blood Test Guide | Diabetes, Prediabetes, HbA1c Results, Fasting, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
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      "position": 6,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can A1C still be useful for monitoring diabetes?",
      "answer": "Yes. For many people with diabetes it remains a useful long-term monitoring test, but targets should be individualized and interpreted alongside symptoms, glucose data, and treatment goals.",
      "pageTitle": "A1C Blood Test Guide | Diabetes, Prediabetes, HbA1c Results, Fasting, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/a1c-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/a1c-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 7,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
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      "answer": "No. Some abnormal results need urgent care or treatment, but others need context, repeat testing, confirmation, or no action beyond monitoring. The right next step depends on the test, the size of the abnormality, symptoms, history, and related results.",
      "pageTitle": "Abnormal Lab Result Next Steps | What to Ask Before You Act",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lab-result-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/abnormal-lab-result-next-steps.html",
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      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
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    {
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      "question": "Should I repeat a lab test before acting?",
      "answer": "Sometimes. Repeat testing may be useful when the result is borderline, unexpected, affected by preparation, inconsistent with symptoms, or needs confirmation. Urgent or critical results should not wait for repeat testing without medical guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Abnormal Lab Result Next Steps | What to Ask Before You Act",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lab-result-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/abnormal-lab-result-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lab-result-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
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      "position": 9,
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      "question": "What does abnormal lymphocytes on a CBC mean?",
      "answer": "It depends on the exact report wording. Reactive or atypical lymphocytes often fit infection or immune activation, while blasts, abnormal lymphoid cells, suspicious cells, or persistent unexplained lymphocytosis can require more urgent clinician review.",
      "pageTitle": "Abnormal Lymphocytes on CBC | Reactive Cells, Atypical Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
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      "position": 10,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are abnormal lymphocytes always cancer?",
      "answer": "No. Many abnormal, atypical, or reactive lymphocyte comments are temporary and related to infections or immune stimulation. Cancer questions become more relevant when wording suggests blasts or abnormal lymphoid cells, the count is persistent or rising, or symptoms and other CBC results are concerning.",
      "pageTitle": "Abnormal Lymphocytes on CBC | Reactive Cells, Atypical Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
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    {
      "position": 11,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the difference between reactive lymphocytes and blasts?",
      "answer": "Reactive lymphocytes are activated immune cells that can appear with infections or inflammation. Blasts are immature blood-forming cells and carry a different level of concern. If a report mentions blasts or possible blasts, prompt clinician follow-up is important.",
      "pageTitle": "Abnormal Lymphocytes on CBC | Reactive Cells, Atypical Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 12,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why would a smear review be ordered for abnormal lymphocytes?",
      "answer": "A peripheral smear lets trained reviewers look directly at blood cell appearance. It can help clarify whether analyzer flags fit reactive cells, atypical lymphocytes, smudge cells, immature cells, blasts, or another pattern that needs additional testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Abnormal Lymphocytes on CBC | Reactive Cells, Atypical Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 13,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is flow cytometry used for abnormal lymphocytes?",
      "answer": "Flow cytometry may be used when lymphocytosis is persistent, a clonal lymphocyte population is suspected, or leukemia or lymphoma is part of the question. It examines markers on cells and is usually ordered based on the CBC, smear, symptoms, and clinician judgment.",
      "pageTitle": "Abnormal Lymphocytes on CBC | Reactive Cells, Atypical Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 14,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should abnormal lymphocyte wording be followed up quickly?",
      "answer": "Follow up promptly if the report mentions blasts, possible blasts, abnormal lymphoid cells, suspicious cells, or urgent pathologist review, or if the result is paired with fever, severe illness, weight loss, night sweats, enlarged lymph nodes, spleen enlargement, bruising, anemia, low platelets, low neutrophils, or a rapidly changing count.",
      "pageTitle": "Abnormal Lymphocytes on CBC | Reactive Cells, Atypical Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/abnormal-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 15,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are acanthocytes?",
      "answer": "Acanthocytes are red blood cells with irregular, uneven spicules on the membrane. They are sometimes called spur cells when the shape appears in a liver-disease context.",
      "pageTitle": "Acanthocytes on Blood Smear | Spur Cells, Liver Disease, Spleen History, Lipids, Artifact, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 16,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "How are acanthocytes different from burr cells?",
      "answer": "Acanthocytes usually have fewer, more irregular projections, while burr cells or echinocytes tend to have more uniform, evenly spaced projections. That difference matters because echinocytes are more often artifact or a different clinical pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Acanthocytes on Blood Smear | Spur Cells, Liver Disease, Spleen History, Lipids, Artifact, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 17,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can liver disease cause acanthocytes?",
      "answer": "Yes. Severe liver dysfunction is a classic cause, and acanthocytes may be part of spur-cell anemia in advanced liver disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Acanthocytes on Blood Smear | Spur Cells, Liver Disease, Spleen History, Lipids, Artifact, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 18,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What other conditions can be associated with acanthocytes?",
      "answer": "Acanthocytes can be seen after splenectomy, in abetalipoproteinemia or other lipid disorders, hypothyroidism, neuroacanthocytosis syndromes, malnutrition, and some medication or marrow contexts.",
      "pageTitle": "Acanthocytes on Blood Smear | Spur Cells, Liver Disease, Spleen History, Lipids, Artifact, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 19,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Could acanthocytes just be an artifact?",
      "answer": "Yes. A delayed or poorly prepared smear can create spiculated red cells that mimic acanthocytes, so a fresh smear and expert review matter when the distinction is unclear.",
      "pageTitle": "Acanthocytes on Blood Smear | Spur Cells, Liver Disease, Spleen History, Lipids, Artifact, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 20,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat smear review, liver tests, bilirubin, hemolysis labs, lipid testing, thyroid testing, and hematology review when the morphology is persistent, numerous, or paired with anemia or jaundice.",
      "pageTitle": "Acanthocytes on Blood Smear | Spur Cells, Liver Disease, Spleen History, Lipids, Artifact, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/acanthocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 21,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive adenovirus stool test mean?",
      "answer": "It means adenovirus genetic material or antigen was found in the stool sample. The result still needs symptom, age, outbreak, and immune-status context to decide whether it explains the illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Adenovirus Stool Test | Enteric Adenovirus, PCR, GI Panels, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 22,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is whole stool preferred?",
      "answer": "CDC says whole stool is the preferred clinical specimen for laboratory diagnosis of enteric adenovirus, so specimen type and handling can matter for accuracy.",
      "pageTitle": "Adenovirus Stool Test | Enteric Adenovirus, PCR, GI Panels, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 23,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out adenovirus?",
      "answer": "Not completely. Timing, sample quality, the exact assay, and whether the panel includes enteric adenovirus targets can all affect interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Adenovirus Stool Test | Enteric Adenovirus, PCR, GI Panels, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 24,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is adenovirus testing useful for every case of diarrhea?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Many gastroenteritis cases are handled clinically unless the illness is severe, prolonged, outbreak-linked, or in a higher-risk person.",
      "pageTitle": "Adenovirus Stool Test | Enteric Adenovirus, PCR, GI Panels, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 25,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a GI panel detect adenovirus?",
      "answer": "Yes, if adenovirus is one of the panel targets. Panel content varies by lab, so the exact adenovirus coverage should be checked on the order or report.",
      "pageTitle": "Adenovirus Stool Test | Enteric Adenovirus, PCR, GI Panels, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 26,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can a positive result be old shedding rather than the cause of symptoms?",
      "answer": "Yes, especially in immunocompromised people or when the illness picture does not fit well. The result should be matched to current symptoms and the rest of the stool workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Adenovirus Stool Test | Enteric Adenovirus, PCR, GI Panels, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/adenovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 27,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is AFP the same as a cancer test?",
      "answer": "No. AFP is sometimes used as a tumor marker in adults, but it is only one clue and is not a stand-alone cancer diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "AFP Blood Test Guide | Pregnancy Screening, Liver Cancer, and Tumor Marker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 28,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can AFP be high in pregnancy?",
      "answer": "Yes. AFP is naturally part of pregnancy screening, and abnormal results may suggest a need for follow-up testing rather than a diagnosis by themselves.",
      "pageTitle": "AFP Blood Test Guide | Pregnancy Screening, Liver Cancer, and Tumor Marker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 29,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does high AFP prove liver cancer?",
      "answer": "No. Liver disease, hepatitis, cirrhosis, pregnancy, and other cancers can also raise AFP.",
      "pageTitle": "AFP Blood Test Guide | Pregnancy Screening, Liver Cancer, and Tumor Marker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 30,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is AFP used alone to screen for liver cancer?",
      "answer": "Usually no. NCI describes AFP in the context of other screening or diagnostic steps, often alongside imaging such as ultrasound.",
      "pageTitle": "AFP Blood Test Guide | Pregnancy Screening, Liver Cancer, and Tumor Marker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 31,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up usually comes after abnormal AFP?",
      "answer": "Follow-up often depends on why the test was ordered and may include repeat AFP, ultrasound or other imaging, liver tests, hepatitis testing, or specialist review.",
      "pageTitle": "AFP Blood Test Guide | Pregnancy Screening, Liver Cancer, and Tumor Marker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 32,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a normal AFP rule out cancer or fetal problems?",
      "answer": "No. A normal AFP does not rule out all cancers or all pregnancy-related concerns, so the result has to be interpreted with the reason for testing and the rest of the workup.",
      "pageTitle": "AFP Blood Test Guide | Pregnancy Screening, Liver Cancer, and Tumor Marker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 33,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Is AFP part of a triple or quad screen?",
      "answer": "Often yes. AFP is commonly interpreted as part of a multiple-marker prenatal screen such as a triple screen or quad screen, where the result is combined with other markers, gestational age, and pregnancy details.",
      "pageTitle": "AFP Blood Test Guide | Pregnancy Screening, Liver Cancer, and Tumor Marker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/afp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/afp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 34,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does low albumin mean on a blood test?",
      "answer": "Low albumin can happen when the liver makes less albumin, the kidneys leak protein into urine, the gut loses or does not absorb protein well, inflammation or severe illness changes protein balance, nutrition is poor, or fluid overload dilutes the blood. The meaning depends on liver tests, kidney tests, urine protein or uACR, symptoms, and trends.",
      "pageTitle": "Albumin Blood Test | Low Albumin, High Albumin, Liver, Kidney, CMP Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 35,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is albumin a nutrition score?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Albumin can be affected by nutrition, but also by inflammation, liver disease, kidney protein loss, fluid status, pregnancy, burns, infection, and digestive disease. It should not be used as a simple grade of how much protein someone eats.",
      "pageTitle": "Albumin Blood Test | Low Albumin, High Albumin, Liver, Kidney, CMP Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 36,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does high albumin mean?",
      "answer": "High albumin is often related to dehydration or a concentrated blood sample. It is usually interpreted with the rest of the comprehensive metabolic panel, total protein, kidney markers, symptoms, and whether the value normalizes.",
      "pageTitle": "Albumin Blood Test | Low Albumin, High Albumin, Liver, Kidney, CMP Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 37,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can kidney disease cause low blood albumin?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some kidney conditions allow albumin to leak from blood into urine. Urine albumin-creatinine ratio, urine protein testing, creatinine, and eGFR can help show whether kidney protein loss is part of the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Albumin Blood Test | Low Albumin, High Albumin, Liver, Kidney, CMP Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 38,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can liver disease cause low albumin?",
      "answer": "Yes. Because albumin is made by the liver, advanced or chronic liver disease can lower albumin. Liver enzyme results, bilirubin, PT/INR, platelets, imaging, symptoms, and trend help distinguish liver production problems from kidney, gut, inflammation, or fluid causes.",
      "pageTitle": "Albumin Blood Test | Low Albumin, High Albumin, Liver, Kidney, CMP Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 39,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after low albumin?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CMP or liver panel, total protein and globulin, urinalysis, urine albumin-creatinine ratio, urine protein-creatinine ratio, creatinine, eGFR, liver enzymes, bilirubin, PT/INR, CBC, inflammatory markers, stool or digestive evaluation, hepatitis testing, imaging, or specialist referral depending on the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Albumin Blood Test | Low Albumin, High Albumin, Liver, Kidney, CMP Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 40,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Is blood albumin the same as urine albumin?",
      "answer": "No. Blood albumin measures the amount of albumin circulating in the bloodstream, while urine albumin checks whether albumin is leaking into urine. They answer different questions and are interpreted differently.",
      "pageTitle": "Albumin Blood Test | Low Albumin, High Albumin, Liver, Kidney, CMP Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/albumin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/albumin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 41,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does high alkaline phosphatase mean?",
      "answer": "High alkaline phosphatase, or high ALP, means the enzyme is above that lab's reference range. ALP can come from liver, bile ducts, bone, intestine, placenta, and other tissues, so the result does not identify the source by itself. GGT, bilirubin, AST, ALT, calcium, vitamin D, PTH, symptoms, trend, and sometimes ALP isoenzymes help clarify the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Alkaline Phosphatase ALP Blood Test | High ALP, GGT, Liver, Bone Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 42,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "How can you tell if high ALP is from liver or bone?",
      "answer": "A high ALP with high GGT, bilirubin, or other liver-panel abnormalities points more toward a liver or bile-duct source. A high ALP with normal GGT and normal liver tests can make bone sources more plausible. ALP isoenzymes, imaging, vitamin D, calcium, phosphorus, and PTH may help when the source is unclear.",
      "pageTitle": "Alkaline Phosphatase ALP Blood Test | High ALP, GGT, Liver, Bone Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 43,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does high ALP and high GGT mean?",
      "answer": "High ALP plus high GGT often supports a liver or bile-duct source because GGT is usually not elevated from bone disease. The pattern still needs context such as bilirubin, jaundice, itching, abdominal pain, medicines, alcohol, hepatitis risk, and imaging results.",
      "pageTitle": "Alkaline Phosphatase ALP Blood Test | High ALP, GGT, Liver, Bone Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 44,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can vitamin D deficiency or bone problems raise ALP?",
      "answer": "Yes. Bone growth, healing fractures, vitamin D deficiency, Paget disease of bone, and other high bone-turnover states can raise ALP. Children and teens may also have higher ALP because bones are growing.",
      "pageTitle": "Alkaline Phosphatase ALP Blood Test | High ALP, GGT, Liver, Bone Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 45,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does low ALP mean?",
      "answer": "Low ALP is less common than high ALP. MedlinePlus lists possible contexts such as zinc deficiency, protein deficiency, malnutrition, pernicious anemia, thyroid disease, Wilson disease, and hypophosphatasia. The lab value should be interpreted with symptoms, repeat results, and the rest of the panel.",
      "pageTitle": "Alkaline Phosphatase ALP Blood Test | High ALP, GGT, Liver, Bone Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 46,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after high ALP?",
      "answer": "Follow-up can include repeat ALP, GGT, bilirubin, AST, ALT, albumin, PT/INR, ALP isoenzymes, calcium, phosphorus, vitamin D, PTH, kidney function, hepatitis testing, ultrasound or other imaging, bone-focused imaging, or specialist referral depending on whether the pattern points toward liver, bile ducts, bone, or another source.",
      "pageTitle": "Alkaline Phosphatase ALP Blood Test | High ALP, GGT, Liver, Bone Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alkaline-phosphatase-alp-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 47,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does alpha-1 testing look for?",
      "answer": "It often combines an AAT blood level with phenotype or SERPINA1 genetic testing to see whether low protein levels reflect inherited alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency Testing | AAT Level, SERPINA1 Genetics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 48,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do the blood level and genetics need to be read together?",
      "answer": "The blood level can be influenced by inflammation, while genotype or phenotype helps show whether the low level is really due to SERPINA1-related deficiency.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency Testing | AAT Level, SERPINA1 Genetics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 49,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is PI typing?",
      "answer": "PI typing checks the protein pattern, which can help identify common deficient alpha-1 antitrypsin variants and confirm the diagnosis in some cases.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency Testing | AAT Level, SERPINA1 Genetics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 50,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is family testing useful?",
      "answer": "Family testing is useful when a pathogenic variant is confirmed, because relatives may have inherited lung or liver risk even if they feel well.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency Testing | AAT Level, SERPINA1 Genetics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 51,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a low AAT level happen for other reasons?",
      "answer": "Yes. Inflammation and other clinical factors can affect the measured level, so the result is interpreted with symptoms, liver tests, and the genetic or phenotype result.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency Testing | AAT Level, SERPINA1 Genetics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 52,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out alpha-1 deficiency?",
      "answer": "Not always. The answer depends on which test was done and whether the panel covered the relevant variants, so the specimen type and method matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency Testing | AAT Level, SERPINA1 Genetics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 53,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does alpha-2 antiplasmin do?",
      "answer": "It is the main inhibitor of plasmin. In plain language, it slows fibrin breakdown so clots do not dissolve too quickly.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-2 Antiplasmin Activity Testing | SERPINF2, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 54,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does low activity mean?",
      "answer": "Low activity can fit inherited alpha-2 antiplasmin deficiency or an acquired hyperfibrinolysis state, especially when bleeding is delayed and routine clotting tests are otherwise unrevealing.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-2 Antiplasmin Activity Testing | SERPINF2, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 55,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is antigen testing sometimes ordered too?",
      "answer": "Activity and antigen together can help separate type I deficiency, where both are low, from type II deficiency, where the amount is normal but the function is not.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-2 Antiplasmin Activity Testing | SERPINF2, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 56,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is this a first-line clot test?",
      "answer": "No. It is a specialist fibrinolysis test that usually comes after a bleeding history suggests clot breakdown rather than clot formation is the problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-2 Antiplasmin Activity Testing | SERPINF2, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 57,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What can make the result look low?",
      "answer": "Liver disease, DIC, thrombolytic therapy, severe illness, and specimen problems can all lower or confound the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-2 Antiplasmin Activity Testing | SERPINF2, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 58,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a normal PT and aPTT rule it out?",
      "answer": "No. PT and aPTT can be normal because the issue is fibrinolysis, not clot formation.",
      "pageTitle": "Alpha-2 Antiplasmin Activity Testing | SERPINF2, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alpha-2-antiplasmin-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 59,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high ALT blood test mean?",
      "answer": "A high ALT means alanine aminotransferase is above that lab's reference range. ALT is found mostly in liver cells, so a high result can be a clue to liver-cell irritation or injury, but the meaning depends on how high it is, whether it persists, and what AST, ALP, bilirubin, albumin, platelets, INR, symptoms, medicines, alcohol, and metabolic risk show.",
      "pageTitle": "ALT Blood Test | High ALT, Alanine Aminotransferase, Liver Panel Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 60,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is ALT more specific for the liver than AST?",
      "answer": "Usually yes. ALT is more concentrated in the liver, while AST is also found in muscle, heart, red blood cells, and other tissues. That is why ALT and AST are interpreted together rather than as isolated scores.",
      "pageTitle": "ALT Blood Test | High ALT, Alanine Aminotransferase, Liver Panel Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 61,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can fatty liver cause high ALT?",
      "answer": "Yes. Metabolic risk factors such as higher body weight, diabetes, insulin resistance, high triglycerides, and fatty liver can be associated with ALT elevation. Follow-up may include repeat liver enzymes, hepatitis testing, metabolic labs, fibrosis risk scores, imaging, or elastography depending on the situation.",
      "pageTitle": "ALT Blood Test | High ALT, Alanine Aminotransferase, Liver Panel Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 62,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can medicines, alcohol, or supplements raise ALT?",
      "answer": "Yes. Alcohol, acetaminophen, some antibiotics, seizure medicines, statins, herbal supplements, and other exposures can be relevant. Do not stop prescribed medicine based only on ALT; ask the ordering clinician how urgent the pattern is and whether medication review or repeat testing is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "ALT Blood Test | High ALT, Alanine Aminotransferase, Liver Panel Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 63,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is high ALT urgent?",
      "answer": "High ALT deserves timely medical attention when it is very high, rising quickly, or paired with jaundice, dark urine, pale stools, confusion, severe abdominal pain, vomiting, bleeding, very abnormal bilirubin or INR, or concern for overdose or acute hepatitis.",
      "pageTitle": "ALT Blood Test | High ALT, Alanine Aminotransferase, Liver Panel Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 64,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after high ALT?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up can include repeat ALT and AST, ALP, GGT, bilirubin, albumin, PT/INR, CBC with platelets, hepatitis A/B/C testing, iron studies, autoimmune or metabolic tests, creatine kinase if muscle injury is possible, ultrasound, elastography, or fibrosis scores such as FIB-4.",
      "pageTitle": "ALT Blood Test | High ALT, Alanine Aminotransferase, Liver Panel Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/alt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/alt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 65,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does AMH measure?",
      "answer": "AMH, or anti-Mullerian hormone, is a blood marker made by ovarian follicles that can help estimate ovarian reserve.",
      "pageTitle": "AMH Test | Ovarian Reserve, Fertility Claims, PCOS, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 66,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can AMH predict natural fertility?",
      "answer": "No. ACOG says a single AMH level should not be used to predict time to pregnancy in women with presumed fertility.",
      "pageTitle": "AMH Test | Ovarian Reserve, Fertility Claims, PCOS, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 67,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is AMH most useful for?",
      "answer": "AMH is most useful in fertility care when estimating likely ovarian response to stimulation or helping plan treatment, not as a stand-alone fertility score.",
      "pageTitle": "AMH Test | Ovarian Reserve, Fertility Claims, PCOS, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 68,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a high AMH mean fertility is good?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. A high AMH can happen in PCOS or other patterns and does not prove pregnancy will happen easily.",
      "pageTitle": "AMH Test | Ovarian Reserve, Fertility Claims, PCOS, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 69,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a low AMH mean pregnancy is impossible?",
      "answer": "No. A low AMH does not prove that pregnancy cannot happen naturally; it is only one piece of the fertility picture.",
      "pageTitle": "AMH Test | Ovarian Reserve, Fertility Claims, PCOS, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 70,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why do labs and doctors talk about assay differences?",
      "answer": "ACOG notes that AMH assays vary, so results can differ between methods and should be interpreted with the same lab and the clinical context when possible.",
      "pageTitle": "AMH Test | Ovarian Reserve, Fertility Claims, PCOS, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amh-test-ovarian-reserve.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 71,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Which is more specific, amylase or lipase?",
      "answer": "Lipase is generally more specific for pancreas injury than amylase, while amylase can come from salivary glands and other tissues.",
      "pageTitle": "Amylase and Lipase Blood Tests | Pancreatitis, Timing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 72,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can lipase be high without pancreatitis?",
      "answer": "Yes. High lipase can occur in other illnesses too, so the result still needs symptoms and context.",
      "pageTitle": "Amylase and Lipase Blood Tests | Pancreatitis, Timing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 73,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can amylase be high from salivary glands?",
      "answer": "Yes. That is one reason amylase is less specific than lipase when the pancreas is the concern.",
      "pageTitle": "Amylase and Lipase Blood Tests | Pancreatitis, Timing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 74,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do normal amylase and lipase rule out pancreatitis?",
      "answer": "No. Normal results reduce support for some cases, but they do not explain every abdominal pain presentation or every timing scenario.",
      "pageTitle": "Amylase and Lipase Blood Tests | Pancreatitis, Timing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 75,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why might calcium or triglycerides be checked too?",
      "answer": "Because both can help look for causes or contributors to pancreatitis when the pancreas is the problem being worked up.",
      "pageTitle": "Amylase and Lipase Blood Tests | Pancreatitis, Timing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 76,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What test follows chronic digestive symptoms?",
      "answer": "If symptoms suggest exocrine pancreatic insufficiency or chronic pancreatitis, clinicians may order stool elastase or other follow-up tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Amylase and Lipase Blood Tests | Pancreatitis, Timing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/amylase-lipase-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 77,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is Angiostrongylus testing usually trying to answer?",
      "answer": "It is usually trying to support or rule in rat lungworm disease when neurologic symptoms and exposure history fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Angiostrongylus Testing | Rat Lungworm, Eosinophilic Meningitis, CSF, PCR, Antibody, and Travel Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 78,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is stool testing enough?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Angiostrongylus workup is more about symptoms, eosinophils, CSF findings, travel, and CDC-supported testing than a routine stool screen.",
      "pageTitle": "Angiostrongylus Testing | Rat Lungworm, Eosinophilic Meningitis, CSF, PCR, Antibody, and Travel Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 79,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is eosinophilia important?",
      "answer": "Blood or CSF eosinophilia can be a major clue, but it still needs to be interpreted with symptoms and exposure history.",
      "pageTitle": "Angiostrongylus Testing | Rat Lungworm, Eosinophilic Meningitis, CSF, PCR, Antibody, and Travel Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 80,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can the test tell if the infection is active right now?",
      "answer": "Not reliably by itself. Timing, specimen type, and clinical findings all matter, and some tests are not widely available.",
      "pageTitle": "Angiostrongylus Testing | Rat Lungworm, Eosinophilic Meningitis, CSF, PCR, Antibody, and Travel Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 81,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the symptoms are severe?",
      "answer": "Severe headache, neck stiffness, neurologic changes, or eye findings need prompt medical evaluation rather than waiting on a consumer-style result.",
      "pageTitle": "Angiostrongylus Testing | Rat Lungworm, Eosinophilic Meningitis, CSF, PCR, Antibody, and Travel Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 82,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who usually handles testing?",
      "answer": "This is usually coordinated by a clinician, often with public-health or CDC input, rather than ordered as a commercial panel.",
      "pageTitle": "Angiostrongylus Testing | Rat Lungworm, Eosinophilic Meningitis, CSF, PCR, Antibody, and Travel Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/angiostrongylus-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 83,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high anion gap mean?",
      "answer": "A high anion gap can suggest extra unmeasured acids in the blood, especially when CO2/bicarbonate is low. Possible urgent contexts include diabetic ketoacidosis, lactic acidosis, kidney failure, severe infection, starvation or alcohol-related ketoacidosis, and certain toxins or medicines. The meaning depends on symptoms, glucose, ketones, lactate, kidney function, albumin, chloride, and repeat testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Anion Gap Blood Test | High Anion Gap, Low CO2, Acidosis, Albumin Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 84,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is the anion gap a separate blood test?",
      "answer": "Usually no. The anion gap is a calculated value based on electrolyte results, most often sodium, chloride, and CO2/bicarbonate. It may appear on a basic metabolic panel, comprehensive metabolic panel, or electrolyte panel report.",
      "pageTitle": "Anion Gap Blood Test | High Anion Gap, Low CO2, Acidosis, Albumin Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 85,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does low CO2 or bicarbonate matter with anion gap?",
      "answer": "CO2 on a chemistry panel is mostly a reflection of bicarbonate. Low CO2/bicarbonate can point toward metabolic acidosis or compensation for breathing-related problems. The anion gap helps classify whether acidosis may be high-gap or normal-gap, but blood gas, lactate, ketones, kidney function, and clinical context may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Anion Gap Blood Test | High Anion Gap, Low CO2, Acidosis, Albumin Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 86,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can low albumin affect the anion gap?",
      "answer": "Yes. Albumin is a major unmeasured anion, so low albumin can make the anion gap look lower and may hide a high-gap acidosis. Clinicians may consider albumin correction when albumin is low.",
      "pageTitle": "Anion Gap Blood Test | High Anion Gap, Low CO2, Acidosis, Albumin Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 87,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does a low anion gap mean?",
      "answer": "A low anion gap is less common. It can happen from lab variation, low albumin, or unusual protein/electrolyte patterns. It is usually interpreted with albumin, total protein, globulin, calcium, magnesium, kidney function, medicines, and whether the result repeats.",
      "pageTitle": "Anion Gap Blood Test | High Anion Gap, Low CO2, Acidosis, Albumin Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 88,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after a high anion gap?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat electrolytes, CO2/bicarbonate, creatinine/eGFR, glucose, ketones, beta-hydroxybutyrate, lactate, blood gas, urinalysis, osmolar gap or toxic alcohol testing, salicylate testing, albumin, infection evaluation, and medication or exposure review depending on symptoms and severity.",
      "pageTitle": "Anion Gap Blood Test | High Anion Gap, Low CO2, Acidosis, Albumin Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anion-gap-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 89,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is Anisakis testing the same as fish allergy testing?",
      "answer": "No. Fish allergy and Anisakis sensitization are different questions, even though the trigger history can look similar.",
      "pageTitle": "Anisakis Allergy and Antibody Testing | Raw Fish Exposure, Endoscopy, IgE, Eosinophils, and Diagnosis Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 90,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can stool testing diagnose anisakiasis?",
      "answer": "Usually no. CDC emphasizes endoscopy or direct visualization when gastric disease is suspected.",
      "pageTitle": "Anisakis Allergy and Antibody Testing | Raw Fish Exposure, Endoscopy, IgE, Eosinophils, and Diagnosis Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 91,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a positive antibody result mean?",
      "answer": "It may show exposure or sensitization, but it does not automatically prove an active worm is still present.",
      "pageTitle": "Anisakis Allergy and Antibody Testing | Raw Fish Exposure, Endoscopy, IgE, Eosinophils, and Diagnosis Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 92,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do eosinophils matter?",
      "answer": "Eosinophilia can support the clinical picture, especially when symptoms and seafood exposure fit, but it is not specific by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Anisakis Allergy and Antibody Testing | Raw Fish Exposure, Endoscopy, IgE, Eosinophils, and Diagnosis Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 93,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should symptoms override the lab result?",
      "answer": "Severe abdominal pain, vomiting, wheezing, hives, or anaphylaxis should prompt medical attention even if testing is pending or unclear.",
      "pageTitle": "Anisakis Allergy and Antibody Testing | Raw Fish Exposure, Endoscopy, IgE, Eosinophils, and Diagnosis Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 94,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What would make the workup clearer?",
      "answer": "A precise exposure history, symptom timing, and the right specialist test - allergy, endoscopy, or infectious disease - make the result easier to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "Anisakis Allergy and Antibody Testing | Raw Fish Exposure, Endoscopy, IgE, Eosinophils, and Diagnosis Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/anisakis-allergy-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 95,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does ANKRD26 genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for germline ANKRD26 variants that can explain inherited thrombocytopenia, normal platelet size, mild bleeding, and increased myeloid-neoplasm risk in some families.",
      "pageTitle": "ANKRD26 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Low Platelets, Myeloid Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 96,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is the 5' UTR important?",
      "answer": "GeneReviews notes that the clinically important ANKRD26 variants are often in the 5' untranslated region, so a panel must actually cover that region to answer the question.",
      "pageTitle": "ANKRD26 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Low Platelets, Myeloid Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 97,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can ANKRD26 look like immune thrombocytopenia?",
      "answer": "Yes. Lifelong mild thrombocytopenia can be mistaken for ITP, especially when the platelet size is normal and the family history is not fully reviewed.",
      "pageTitle": "ANKRD26 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Low Platelets, Myeloid Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 98,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does an ANKRD26 finding on tumor testing prove inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor or marrow finding may be somatic, so a germline specimen strategy is needed if inherited family risk is the real question.",
      "pageTitle": "ANKRD26 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Low Platelets, Myeloid Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 99,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do donor questions matter?",
      "answer": "If the variant is germline, relatives or related stem-cell donors may also carry it, which can affect transplant planning and family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "ANKRD26 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Low Platelets, Myeloid Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 100,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if ANKRD26 testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance that ANKRD26 explains the pattern, but it does not rule out other inherited platelet genes or acquired causes of low platelets.",
      "pageTitle": "ANKRD26 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Low Platelets, Myeloid Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ankrd26-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 101,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are the main APS antibody tests?",
      "answer": "The usual trio is lupus anticoagulant, anticardiolipin, and anti-beta-2 glycoprotein I.",
      "pageTitle": "Antiphospholipid Syndrome Antibody Testing | Lupus Anticoagulant, Repeat Testing, and Clot Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 102,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one positive test diagnose APS?",
      "answer": "No. APS usually requires the right clinical history plus persistent antibody positivity on repeat testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Antiphospholipid Syndrome Antibody Testing | Lupus Anticoagulant, Repeat Testing, and Clot Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 103,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is the lupus anticoagulant test tricky?",
      "answer": "It is a clotting-pattern test, so anticoagulants and other clotting issues can interfere with interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Antiphospholipid Syndrome Antibody Testing | Lupus Anticoagulant, Repeat Testing, and Clot Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 104,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does repeat testing wait 12 weeks?",
      "answer": "That helps show whether the antibody signal is persistent rather than temporary after illness or inflammation.",
      "pageTitle": "Antiphospholipid Syndrome Antibody Testing | Lupus Anticoagulant, Repeat Testing, and Clot Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 105,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is APS testing used in pregnancy loss workups?",
      "answer": "Yes, especially when pregnancy loss is recurrent or there are other APS clues in the history.",
      "pageTitle": "Antiphospholipid Syndrome Antibody Testing | Lupus Anticoagulant, Repeat Testing, and Clot Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 106,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I ask about a specialist?",
      "answer": "Hematology, rheumatology, or maternal-fetal medicine is often the next step when the history and labs point toward APS.",
      "pageTitle": "Antiphospholipid Syndrome Antibody Testing | Lupus Anticoagulant, Repeat Testing, and Clot Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/antiphospholipid-syndrome-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 107,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are ApoB and Lp(a) included in a standard lipid panel?",
      "answer": "Usually no. A standard lipid panel commonly reports total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and triglycerides. ApoB and lipoprotein(a) are separate tests when ordered.",
      "pageTitle": "ApoB and Lp(a) Blood Tests | Advanced Cholesterol and Heart Risk Markers",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apob-lpa-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apob-lpa-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apob-lpa-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 108,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is lipoprotein(a)?",
      "answer": "MedlinePlus describes lipoprotein(a), or Lp(a), as a type of LDL particle. A high Lp(a) level may mean higher risk for heart disease and stroke.",
      "pageTitle": "ApoB and Lp(a) Blood Tests | Advanced Cholesterol and Heart Risk Markers",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apob-lpa-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apob-lpa-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apob-lpa-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 109,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does APOE e4 mean I will get Alzheimer's disease?",
      "answer": "No. It increases risk, but it does not diagnose the disease and it does not guarantee that you will develop it.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE Genetic Testing Claims | Alzheimer's Risk, e4, Lipids, DTC Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 110,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can APOE testing be useful for cholesterol problems?",
      "answer": "Sometimes. APOE can matter in specific lipid patterns such as type III hyperlipoproteinemia, but it is not a general cholesterol treatment plan.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE Genetic Testing Claims | Alzheimer's Risk, e4, Lipids, DTC Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 111,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why might a direct-to-consumer APOE result be incomplete?",
      "answer": "Because companies do not all test the same variants or frame the result the same way, so two reports can differ even for the same person.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE Genetic Testing Claims | Alzheimer's Risk, e4, Lipids, DTC Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 112,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should I use APOE to screen for memory symptoms?",
      "answer": "No. Memory changes need a clinical evaluation, because APOE only describes one risk factor and does not replace diagnostic workup.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE Genetic Testing Claims | Alzheimer's Risk, e4, Lipids, DTC Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 113,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who should help me interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A genetic counselor, neurologist, lipid specialist, or primary-care clinician can put the result into family history and symptom context.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE Genetic Testing Claims | Alzheimer's Risk, e4, Lipids, DTC Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 114,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the result makes me anxious?",
      "answer": "That is common. Risk information is easier to interpret when you know the exact test claim, the limitations, and what action, if any, the result changes.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE Genetic Testing Claims | Alzheimer's Risk, e4, Lipids, DTC Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 115,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is APOE testing?",
      "answer": "APOE testing looks at common versions of the APOE gene, usually e2, e3, and e4, to estimate risk rather than diagnose disease.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE testing for Alzheimer risk | risk marker, family history, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 116,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does APOE e4 mean I will get Alzheimer's disease?",
      "answer": "No. APOE e4 increases risk, but it does not guarantee that you will develop Alzheimer's disease and it does not tell you when symptoms will start.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE testing for Alzheimer risk | risk marker, family history, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 117,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is APOE testing most useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful when a clinician or counselor can place it into a broader context such as family history, memory symptoms, or another reason the result might change decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE testing for Alzheimer risk | risk marker, family history, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 118,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can APOE testing diagnose memory loss?",
      "answer": "No. Memory symptoms need a medical evaluation. APOE only describes one risk factor and cannot replace an exam, cognitive testing, or other workup.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE testing for Alzheimer risk | risk marker, family history, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 119,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do DTC APOE reports need caution?",
      "answer": "Because direct-to-consumer tests do not all examine the same variants or frame the result the same way, and the FDA notes that claims and intended use matter.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE testing for Alzheimer risk | risk marker, family history, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 120,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should I talk to someone before testing?",
      "answer": "Yes, if the result could affect anxiety, family communication, privacy, or screening decisions. A genetic counselor or clinician can help you decide whether testing is worth it.",
      "pageTitle": "APOE testing for Alzheimer risk | risk marker, family history, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/apoe-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 121,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an aPTT blood test measure?",
      "answer": "An aPTT or PTT test measures how long it takes plasma to clot through parts of the intrinsic and common clotting pathways. It is used in bleeding workups, some procedure evaluations, heparin monitoring, and clotting-factor or inhibitor investigations.",
      "pageTitle": "aPTT Blood Test Guide | High PTT, Heparin, Bleeding, Clotting Factors, and Lupus Anticoagulant",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 122,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a high or prolonged aPTT mean?",
      "answer": "A prolonged aPTT means clotting took longer than expected in this test system. Possible contexts include heparin or other anticoagulants, clotting factor deficiencies, inhibitors such as lupus anticoagulant or factor inhibitors, liver disease, DIC, sample issues, or other illnesses.",
      "pageTitle": "aPTT Blood Test Guide | High PTT, Heparin, Bleeding, Clotting Factors, and Lupus Anticoagulant",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 123,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How is aPTT different from PT/INR?",
      "answer": "aPTT and PT/INR look at overlapping but different parts of the clotting system. PT/INR is central for warfarin monitoring and some liver or vitamin K questions, while aPTT is often used for unfractionated heparin monitoring and intrinsic-pathway bleeding or inhibitor questions.",
      "pageTitle": "aPTT Blood Test Guide | High PTT, Heparin, Bleeding, Clotting Factors, and Lupus Anticoagulant",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 124,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does lupus anticoagulant mean bleeding?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Lupus anticoagulant can prolong aPTT in the lab, but it is often discussed because of clotting risk in antiphospholipid syndrome. The name can be confusing, so interpretation depends on the full lupus anticoagulant panel, symptoms, clot history, pregnancy history, and repeat testing.",
      "pageTitle": "aPTT Blood Test Guide | High PTT, Heparin, Bleeding, Clotting Factors, and Lupus Anticoagulant",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 125,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What is a mixing study after a prolonged aPTT?",
      "answer": "A mixing study combines patient plasma with normal plasma to help distinguish a clotting factor deficiency from an inhibitor pattern. Correction suggests a factor deficiency pattern; lack of correction can suggest an inhibitor or anticoagulant effect, but the lab and clinician interpret the details.",
      "pageTitle": "aPTT Blood Test Guide | High PTT, Heparin, Bleeding, Clotting Factors, and Lupus Anticoagulant",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/aptt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/aptt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 126,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Ascaris stool testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for roundworm eggs, and sometimes visible worms or fragments that can be identified by the lab or a clinician.",
      "pageTitle": "Ascaris Stool Test | Roundworm Eggs, O&P Exam, Travel, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Samples",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 127,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one stool sample miss Ascaris?",
      "answer": "Yes. Parasite shedding can vary, so one sample can be negative even when infection is still present.",
      "pageTitle": "Ascaris Stool Test | Roundworm Eggs, O&P Exam, Travel, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Samples",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 128,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does travel or sanitation exposure matter?",
      "answer": "Yes. Ascaris is a soil-transmitted helminth, so travel, migration, and soil or sanitation exposure can raise suspicion.",
      "pageTitle": "Ascaris Stool Test | Roundworm Eggs, O&P Exam, Travel, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Samples",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 129,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Could hookworm or whipworm look similar?",
      "answer": "They can overlap because hookworm and Trichuris are also soil-transmitted helminths and may be worked up with similar stool testing questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Ascaris Stool Test | Roundworm Eggs, O&P Exam, Travel, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Samples",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 130,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can eosinophils confirm Ascaris?",
      "answer": "No. Eosinophilia can support a parasite workup, but it does not identify the parasite or prove Ascaris infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Ascaris Stool Test | Roundworm Eggs, O&P Exam, Travel, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Samples",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 131,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I seek care sooner?",
      "answer": "Seek care promptly for severe abdominal pain, vomiting, dehydration, blood in stool, or other red-flag symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Ascaris Stool Test | Roundworm Eggs, O&P Exam, Travel, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Samples",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 132,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Why might repeat stool samples be requested?",
      "answer": "Because egg shedding can be intermittent, and one negative sample does not always rule out infection when exposure history still fits.",
      "pageTitle": "Ascaris Stool Test | Roundworm Eggs, O&P Exam, Travel, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Samples",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ascaris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 133,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high AST blood test mean?",
      "answer": "A high AST means aspartate aminotransferase is above that lab's reference range. AST can rise from liver-cell injury, but it can also rise from muscle injury, strenuous exercise, hemolysis, heart injury, alcohol-related liver disease, medicines, or other tissue damage. The meaning depends on ALT, ALP, GGT, bilirubin, albumin, PT/INR, platelets, CK, symptoms, and trend.",
      "pageTitle": "AST Blood Test | High AST, AST/ALT Ratio, Liver and Muscle Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 134,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is AST a liver test or a muscle test?",
      "answer": "It can be both. AST is used in liver panels, but it is also found in skeletal muscle, heart, red blood cells, and other tissues. ALT is usually more liver-focused, so AST is best interpreted with ALT and, when muscle injury is possible, creatine kinase (CK).",
      "pageTitle": "AST Blood Test | High AST, AST/ALT Ratio, Liver and Muscle Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 135,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does it mean when AST is higher than ALT?",
      "answer": "AST higher than ALT can occur with alcohol-related liver injury, advanced liver disease, muscle contribution, hemolysis, or other non-liver sources. The ratio is only a clue; GGT, bilirubin, albumin, PT/INR, platelets, CK, alcohol history, symptoms, and repeat testing help clarify the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "AST Blood Test | High AST, AST/ALT Ratio, Liver and Muscle Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 136,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can exercise raise AST?",
      "answer": "Yes. Strenuous exercise or muscle injury can raise AST, sometimes with CK elevation. That pattern is different from a liver-focused pattern with high ALT, bilirubin, ALP, GGT, or abnormal liver function markers.",
      "pageTitle": "AST Blood Test | High AST, AST/ALT Ratio, Liver and Muscle Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 137,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is high AST urgent?",
      "answer": "High AST needs timely medical attention when it is very high, rising quickly, or paired with chest pain, severe muscle pain or weakness, dark cola-colored urine, jaundice, confusion, severe abdominal pain, vomiting, bleeding, very abnormal bilirubin or INR, or concern for overdose, acute hepatitis, heart injury, or rhabdomyolysis.",
      "pageTitle": "AST Blood Test | High AST, AST/ALT Ratio, Liver and Muscle Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 138,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after high AST?",
      "answer": "Follow-up can include repeat AST and ALT, ALP, GGT, bilirubin, albumin, PT/INR, CBC with platelets, creatine kinase, kidney function, urinalysis, hepatitis testing, iron studies, autoimmune or metabolic tests, ultrasound, elastography, or fibrosis scoring such as FIB-4 depending on the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "AST Blood Test | High AST, AST/ALT Ratio, Liver and Muscle Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ast-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ast-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 139,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive astrovirus stool PCR mean?",
      "answer": "It means astrovirus genetic material was detected in the stool sample. The result still needs symptom and outbreak context before it is treated as the whole explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "Astrovirus Stool Test | PCR, Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreak Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 140,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can astrovirus be found on broad GI panels?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some multiplex panels include astrovirus among viral diarrhea targets, but panel content varies by lab.",
      "pageTitle": "Astrovirus Stool Test | PCR, Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreak Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 141,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does age matter for interpretation?",
      "answer": "Yes. Children, older adults, and immunocompromised people can have different risk and follow-up considerations than healthy adults.",
      "pageTitle": "Astrovirus Stool Test | PCR, Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreak Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 142,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a positive test be old shedding?",
      "answer": "It can. PCR detects genetic material, so the timing relative to symptoms matters a lot.",
      "pageTitle": "Astrovirus Stool Test | PCR, Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreak Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 143,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if another organism was detected too?",
      "answer": "Then co-detection has to be sorted by which target best fits the symptom timing, severity, and exposure story.",
      "pageTitle": "Astrovirus Stool Test | PCR, Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreak Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 144,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether this result changes hydration guidance, isolation, outbreak steps, or whether another diagnosis still needs to be checked.",
      "pageTitle": "Astrovirus Stool Test | PCR, Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreak Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/astrovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 145,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a cortisol rhythm panel diagnose burnout?",
      "answer": "No. It may show a pattern, but burnout is not a cortisol diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Cortisol Rhythm Tests | Saliva Panels, Stress Claims, Cushing Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 146,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a single cortisol result diagnose Cushing syndrome?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Clinicians use a specific screening approach and symptoms together.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Cortisol Rhythm Tests | Saliva Panels, Stress Claims, Cushing Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 147,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do shift workers get confusing results?",
      "answer": "Sleep timing, light exposure, and sample timing can distort the expected rhythm.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Cortisol Rhythm Tests | Saliva Panels, Stress Claims, Cushing Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 148,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can steroids change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Steroid medicines and some related therapies can interfere with interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Cortisol Rhythm Tests | Saliva Panels, Stress Claims, Cushing Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 149,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is saliva better than blood for home testing?",
      "answer": "It depends on the question. Saliva is useful for certain screening contexts, but not as a general wellness score.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Cortisol Rhythm Tests | Saliva Panels, Stress Claims, Cushing Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 150,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do with a concerning result?",
      "answer": "Use it as a reason to ask whether formal endocrine testing is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Cortisol Rhythm Tests | Saliva Panels, Stress Claims, Cushing Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 151,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What does a clinician usually order next?",
      "answer": "That depends on the question, but late-night saliva, urine cortisol, morning blood cortisol, ACTH, and suppression testing are common next steps.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Cortisol Rhythm Tests | Saliva Panels, Stress Claims, Cushing Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-cortisol-rhythm-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 152,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a home FSH test prove menopause?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Menopause is usually a clinical diagnosis based on age, symptoms, and menstrual history.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Menopause Hormone Panel Claims | FSH, Estradiol, Saliva, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 153,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do hormone levels fluctuate so much?",
      "answer": "Perimenopause, cycle timing, medications, and the hormone itself can all cause swings.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Menopause Hormone Panel Claims | FSH, Estradiol, Saliva, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 154,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should I use a panel to pick hormone therapy?",
      "answer": "Usually no. ACOG cautions against using saliva or serum panels to individualize compounded therapy.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Menopause Hormone Panel Claims | FSH, Estradiol, Saliva, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 155,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can birth control change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Hormonal contraception can make interpretation harder and can mask the natural pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Menopause Hormone Panel Claims | FSH, Estradiol, Saliva, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 156,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do symptoms matter more than a number?",
      "answer": "Often yes, especially when discussing hot flashes, sleep, vaginal symptoms, and bleeding changes.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Menopause Hormone Panel Claims | FSH, Estradiol, Saliva, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 157,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I ask for a clinician visit instead?",
      "answer": "Whenever bleeding is abnormal, pregnancy is possible, symptoms are severe, or a test result is being used to justify treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Menopause Hormone Panel Claims | FSH, Estradiol, Saliva, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 158,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Can estradiol or progesterone numbers diagnose menopause?",
      "answer": "They can add context, but menopause is usually a clinical diagnosis based on age, symptoms, and menstrual history rather than one panel.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Menopause Hormone Panel Claims | FSH, Estradiol, Saliva, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-menopause-hormone-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 159,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the difference between STI self-testing and self-collection?",
      "answer": "Self-testing means you collect and test the sample yourself and get results directly. Self-collection means you collect a sample and send it to a laboratory for testing.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home STI Tests vs Clinic Testing | Self-Collection, Self-Tests, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 160,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can you use at-home STI testing instead of clinic testing?",
      "answer": "At-home options can improve access, but clinic testing may be better when you have symptoms, need site-specific testing, need treatment, are pregnant, had a recent exposure, or need help interpreting results.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home STI Tests vs Clinic Testing | Self-Collection, Self-Tests, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 161,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why might clinic testing be better for symptoms?",
      "answer": "Symptoms can point to a broader differential, so a clinician may need to examine you and order tests that match the body site and the likely cause.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home STI Tests vs Clinic Testing | Self-Collection, Self-Tests, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 162,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do at-home kits test every body site?",
      "answer": "No. Some infections need throat, rectal, or genital-site testing based on exposure, and those sites are not always included in home kits.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home STI Tests vs Clinic Testing | Self-Collection, Self-Tests, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 163,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should happen after a positive home test?",
      "answer": "A positive result should connect to treatment, partner services, and any confirmatory testing or follow-up that the specific infection requires.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home STI Tests vs Clinic Testing | Self-Collection, Self-Tests, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 164,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Are home tests or self-collection always FDA-approved?",
      "answer": "No. The exact product and intended use matter. Some tests are FDA-authorized for specific uses, while other products may have different evidence or claims.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home STI Tests vs Clinic Testing | Self-Collection, Self-Tests, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-sti-tests-vs-clinic.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 165,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a saliva kit diagnose low testosterone?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Clinical diagnosis generally relies on morning blood testing plus symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Testosterone Optimization Claims | Low T Testing, Saliva, Blood, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 166,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does timing matter so much?",
      "answer": "Testosterone varies during the day, so a late sample can be misleading.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Testosterone Optimization Claims | Low T Testing, Saliva, Blood, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 167,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does one low result mean I need treatment?",
      "answer": "No. Low results are usually repeated and interpreted with symptoms and context.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Testosterone Optimization Claims | Low T Testing, Saliva, Blood, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 168,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does SHBG matter?",
      "answer": "SHBG changes can make total testosterone harder to interpret, which is why free or calculated measures sometimes help.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Testosterone Optimization Claims | Low T Testing, Saliva, Blood, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 169,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can treatment affect fertility?",
      "answer": "Yes. Testosterone therapy can reduce sperm production and should be discussed before starting.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Testosterone Optimization Claims | Low T Testing, Saliva, Blood, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 170,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do with an \"optimization\" label?",
      "answer": "Ask what specific medical decision changes, and whether the answer is actually about a diagnosis or treatment plan.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Testosterone Optimization Claims | Low T Testing, Saliva, Blood, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 171,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Can a normal testosterone level still deserve follow-up?",
      "answer": "Yes. Symptoms, fertility goals, medication effects, or other endocrine problems can still warrant evaluation even when one number is not clearly low.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Testosterone Optimization Claims | Low T Testing, Saliva, Blood, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-testosterone-optimization-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 172,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is TSH usually the first thyroid test?",
      "answer": "Yes. MedlinePlus and NIDDK both describe TSH as the usual first blood test for thyroid screening.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Thyroid Optimization Panels | TSH, T4, T3, Antibodies, Reverse T3, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 173,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does reverse T3 usually help diagnose hypothyroidism?",
      "answer": "No. The American Thyroid Association says reverse T3 is not clinically useful for determining whether hypothyroidism exists in healthy, non-hospitalized people.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Thyroid Optimization Panels | TSH, T4, T3, Antibodies, Reverse T3, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 174,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can biotin change thyroid results?",
      "answer": "Yes. Biotin can interfere with some thyroid assays and should be reported before testing.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Thyroid Optimization Panels | TSH, T4, T3, Antibodies, Reverse T3, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 175,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do more thyroid markers always make the panel better?",
      "answer": "No. Extra markers can add noise without improving the diagnosis or the treatment decision.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Thyroid Optimization Panels | TSH, T4, T3, Antibodies, Reverse T3, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 176,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When are thyroid antibodies useful?",
      "answer": "They can help support autoimmune thyroid disease evaluation, but positive antibodies alone do not always mean treatment is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Thyroid Optimization Panels | TSH, T4, T3, Antibodies, Reverse T3, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 177,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What matters more than the panel itself?",
      "answer": "The symptoms, pregnancy status, medicine timing, pituitary context, and the action you would take based on the result matter more than the number of markers included.",
      "pageTitle": "At-Home Thyroid Optimization Panels | TSH, T4, T3, Antibodies, Reverse T3, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/at-home-thyroid-optimization-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 178,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a pathogenic ATM result usually mean?",
      "answer": "A pathogenic or likely pathogenic ATM result can support hereditary cancer counseling and may affect breast, pancreatic, prostate, and family-testing discussions depending on the exact variant and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "ATM Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 179,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is an ATM VUS actionable?",
      "answer": "No. An ATM variant of uncertain significance should not be treated like a confirmed harmful variant.",
      "pageTitle": "ATM Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 180,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative ATM result rule out inherited risk?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. A negative result can be uninformative if there is a known family variant or if other hereditary cancer genes were not tested.",
      "pageTitle": "ATM Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 181,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a tumor-only ATM finding prove inheritance?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only ATM change may reflect cancer tissue rather than inherited DNA and may need germline confirmation before relatives are told to test.",
      "pageTitle": "ATM Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 182,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do relatives need targeted testing?",
      "answer": "When a confirmed familial pathogenic ATM variant is known, relatives may be offered targeted testing for that exact variant.",
      "pageTitle": "ATM Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 183,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why does biallelic ATM matter?",
      "answer": "Two pathogenic ATM variants can point to ataxia-telangiectasia or related counseling, which is a different question than a single inherited cancer-risk variant.",
      "pageTitle": "ATM Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 184,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Can paired tumor-normal testing help with ATM?",
      "answer": "Yes. Paired testing can help show whether an ATM change is confined to the tumor or also present in normal DNA, which changes how family-risk counseling is handled.",
      "pageTitle": "ATM Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atm-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 185,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are atypical lymphocytes the same as cancer cells?",
      "answer": "No. Atypical or reactive lymphocytes often describe activated immune cells, commonly in viral or inflammatory settings. They are interpreted differently from blasts, lymphoma cells, or other abnormal lymphoid cells.",
      "pageTitle": "High Atypical Lymphocytes | Reactive Lymphocytes, Viral Illness, CBC Differential, Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 186,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What infections can cause atypical lymphocytes?",
      "answer": "Viral illnesses are common contexts. EBV infectious mononucleosis is a classic example, but clinicians may also consider CMV, other viral syndromes, pertussis, toxoplasmosis, drug reactions, or other causes depending on symptoms and exposure history.",
      "pageTitle": "High Atypical Lymphocytes | Reactive Lymphocytes, Viral Illness, CBC Differential, Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 187,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the absolute lymphocyte count matter?",
      "answer": "Percentages can look high when the total white blood cell count changes. The absolute lymphocyte count shows the actual number of lymphocytes in blood and helps decide whether the result is mild, marked, transient, or persistent.",
      "pageTitle": "High Atypical Lymphocytes | Reactive Lymphocytes, Viral Illness, CBC Differential, Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 188,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should high atypical lymphocytes be repeated?",
      "answer": "Repeat timing depends on symptoms and the rest of the CBC. A clinician may repeat the CBC after a suspected infection improves, sooner if counts are very abnormal, or more urgently if anemia, low platelets, blasts, or concerning symptoms are present.",
      "pageTitle": "High Atypical Lymphocytes | Reactive Lymphocytes, Viral Illness, CBC Differential, Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 189,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a negative Monospot rule out EBV?",
      "answer": "Not always. CDC notes that the Monospot test is not recommended for general use and can have false positive and false negative results. EBV-specific antibody testing may be used when the diagnosis is unclear.",
      "pageTitle": "High Atypical Lymphocytes | Reactive Lymphocytes, Viral Illness, CBC Differential, Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 190,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What wording is more concerning than reactive lymphocytes?",
      "answer": "Terms such as blasts, abnormal lymphoid cells, suspicious for leukemia or lymphoma, or recommendation for urgent pathologist or hematology review carry different meaning than reactive lymphocytes and should be followed up promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "High Atypical Lymphocytes | Reactive Lymphocytes, Viral Illness, CBC Differential, Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/atypical-lymphocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 191,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Auer rods on a blood smear mean?",
      "answer": "Auer rods are needle-like inclusions seen in immature myeloid cells. A report mentioning Auer rods is a high-priority clue for acute myeloid leukemia or a related urgent hematology evaluation, especially if blasts or abnormal promyelocytes are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Auer Rods on Blood Smear | AML Clue, Blasts, Promyelocytes, APL Risk, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 192,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are Auer rods the same as blasts?",
      "answer": "No. Blasts are immature blood-forming cells. Auer rods are structures that may be seen inside myeloid blasts or related immature myeloid cells. Their presence supports myeloid lineage and changes the urgency of follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Auer Rods on Blood Smear | AML Clue, Blasts, Promyelocytes, APL Risk, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 193,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do Auer rods always mean acute promyelocytic leukemia?",
      "answer": "No. Auer rods can appear in AML patterns beyond acute promyelocytic leukemia. However, Auer rods with abnormal promyelocytes can raise concern for APL, which can be a medical emergency because of bleeding and clotting risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Auer Rods on Blood Smear | AML Clue, Blasts, Promyelocytes, APL Risk, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 194,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does pathologist or hematopathologist review matter?",
      "answer": "Auer rod wording is morphology-dependent. Expert smear review helps confirm whether the finding is definite or possible, what cells contain the rods, whether blasts or promyelocytes are present, and what urgent testing is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Auer Rods on Blood Smear | AML Clue, Blasts, Promyelocytes, APL Risk, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 195,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests may follow an Auer rod report?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual smear review, hematopathology review, flow cytometry, bone marrow aspiration or biopsy, cytogenetic testing, FISH, molecular testing, coagulation studies, chemistry tests, and urgent hematology evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Auer Rods on Blood Smear | AML Clue, Blasts, Promyelocytes, APL Risk, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 196,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should Auer rod wording be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Treat it as urgent if the report mentions Auer rods, possible Auer rods, blasts, abnormal promyelocytes, possible acute leukemia, or urgent review, especially with fever, infection, bruising, bleeding, anemia, low platelets, low neutrophils, high or rapidly changing WBC, shortness of breath, severe fatigue, confusion, or clotting-test abnormalities.",
      "pageTitle": "Auer Rods on Blood Smear | AML Clue, Blasts, Promyelocytes, APL Risk, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/auer-rods-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 197,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are band neutrophils?",
      "answer": "Band neutrophils are young neutrophils. A small number may appear on a CBC differential, but a higher band percentage can suggest that the bone marrow is releasing immature neutrophils during infection, inflammation, tissue stress, or another marrow response.",
      "pageTitle": "High Band Neutrophils | Bandemia, Left Shift, Infection, Sepsis Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 198,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does high band neutrophils or bandemia mean?",
      "answer": "High band neutrophils, often called bandemia, is a left-shift clue. It can fit infection, inflammation, tissue injury, stress, or marrow recovery, but it is not a diagnosis by itself and should be interpreted with symptoms, WBC, ANC, smear findings, and trends.",
      "pageTitle": "High Band Neutrophils | Bandemia, Left Shift, Infection, Sepsis Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 199,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does bandemia mean sepsis?",
      "answer": "Bandemia can appear in sepsis and should be taken seriously when symptoms or vital signs are concerning, but it does not prove sepsis by itself. Fever, low blood pressure, confusion, lactate, cultures, organ function, WBC trend, and clinician assessment determine urgency.",
      "pageTitle": "High Band Neutrophils | Bandemia, Left Shift, Infection, Sepsis Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 200,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can bands be high with normal WBC?",
      "answer": "Yes. Bands can be increased even when the total WBC is normal, so clinicians look at the whole differential, ANC, symptoms, vital signs, smear review, and whether the result is changing over time.",
      "pageTitle": "High Band Neutrophils | Bandemia, Left Shift, Infection, Sepsis Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 201,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed for high bands?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual blood smear review, infection or inflammation evaluation, cultures or imaging when clinically appropriate, chemistry tests, lactate in sepsis-context care, medication review, and hematology input if other abnormal cells or cytopenias are present.",
      "pageTitle": "High Band Neutrophils | Bandemia, Left Shift, Infection, Sepsis Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 202,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should high bands be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Seek prompt medical guidance if high bands appear with fever, chills, low blood pressure, confusion, shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, severe pain, severe weakness, very high or very low WBC, low neutrophils, low platelets, severe anemia, blasts, Auer rods, or rapidly worsening symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "High Band Neutrophils | Bandemia, Left Shift, Infection, Sepsis Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/band-neutrophils-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 203,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What cancers are most associated with BAP1?",
      "answer": "BAP1 tumor predisposition syndrome is most associated with uveal melanoma, cutaneous melanoma, mesothelioma, renal cell carcinoma, and BAP1-inactivated melanocytic tumors.",
      "pageTitle": "BAP1 Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | Melanoma, Mesothelioma, Kidney Cancer, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 204,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a tumor-only BAP1 finding inherited?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. A tumor-only BAP1 change may help explain a tumor but does not by itself prove inherited predisposition syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "BAP1 Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | Melanoma, Mesothelioma, Kidney Cancer, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 205,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is a BAP1 VUS actionable?",
      "answer": "No. A BAP1 variant of uncertain significance should not be treated like a confirmed harmful variant.",
      "pageTitle": "BAP1 Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | Melanoma, Mesothelioma, Kidney Cancer, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 206,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative BAP1 result rule out the syndrome?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative result is most reassuring when there is a known family variant and the test targeted that exact change.",
      "pageTitle": "BAP1 Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | Melanoma, Mesothelioma, Kidney Cancer, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 207,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do relatives need targeted testing?",
      "answer": "Yes, when a confirmed familial pathogenic BAP1 variant is known and the family is being counseled around inherited risk.",
      "pageTitle": "BAP1 Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | Melanoma, Mesothelioma, Kidney Cancer, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 208,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why does specimen type matter?",
      "answer": "Blood, saliva, cheek cells, tumor tissue, and paired tumor-normal testing answer different questions and can change how the result should be interpreted.",
      "pageTitle": "BAP1 Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | Melanoma, Mesothelioma, Kidney Cancer, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 209,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "How can paired tumor-normal testing help with BAP1?",
      "answer": "It can help show whether a BAP1 change is only in the tumor or also in normal DNA, which changes whether the finding should be treated as inherited risk.",
      "pageTitle": "BAP1 Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | Melanoma, Mesothelioma, Kidney Cancer, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bap1-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 210,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a BARD1 pathogenic variant mean cancer is certain?",
      "answer": "No. It raises inherited risk, but it does not make cancer certain.",
      "pageTitle": "BARD1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 211,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a BARD1 VUS change screening?",
      "answer": "No. A BARD1 variant of uncertain significance should not be treated like a confirmed harmful variant.",
      "pageTitle": "BARD1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 212,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative BARD1 result rule out inherited risk?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative result is most reassuring when there is a known family variant and the test targeted that exact change.",
      "pageTitle": "BARD1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 213,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does tumor-only BARD1 prove inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only BARD1 change may help explain a tumor but does not by itself prove inherited predisposition.",
      "pageTitle": "BARD1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 214,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "Yes, when a confirmed familial pathogenic BARD1 variant is known and the family is being counseled around inherited risk.",
      "pageTitle": "BARD1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 215,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should counseling clarify first?",
      "answer": "The exact variant, specimen type, family cancer pattern, and whether prior tumor findings were confirmed in germline DNA.",
      "pageTitle": "BARD1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bard1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 216,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a basic metabolic panel measure?",
      "answer": "A basic metabolic panel usually measures eight blood chemistry markers: glucose, calcium, sodium, potassium, chloride, carbon dioxide or bicarbonate, BUN, and creatinine.",
      "pageTitle": "Basic Metabolic Panel Guide | BMP Markers, Fasting, Kidney, and Electrolytes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 217,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do you need to fast for a BMP?",
      "answer": "You may need to fast for about eight hours before a BMP. Fasting matters most when glucose interpretation is important or when other fasting blood tests are drawn at the same visit.",
      "pageTitle": "Basic Metabolic Panel Guide | BMP Markers, Fasting, Kidney, and Electrolytes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 218,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is a BMP enough to check kidney function?",
      "answer": "A BMP includes BUN and creatinine, but kidney evaluation often also uses eGFR, urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio, urinalysis, symptoms, medicines, blood pressure, diabetes history, and trends over time.",
      "pageTitle": "Basic Metabolic Panel Guide | BMP Markers, Fasting, Kidney, and Electrolytes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basic-metabolic-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 219,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high basophil count mean?",
      "answer": "A high basophil count is called basophilia. It can occur with allergic or inflammatory conditions, some infections, hypothyroidism, and less commonly bone marrow disorders. The meaning depends on the absolute basophil count, repeat results, symptoms, and the rest of the CBC.",
      "pageTitle": "High Basophil Count | Basophilia, Absolute Basophils, Allergies, Thyroid, CBC Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 220,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is basophil percentage or absolute basophil count more important?",
      "answer": "The absolute basophil count is usually more useful than the percentage alone. Because basophils are normally rare, a small percentage change can look dramatic while the actual number remains only mildly elevated.",
      "pageTitle": "High Basophil Count | Basophilia, Absolute Basophils, Allergies, Thyroid, CBC Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 221,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can allergies cause high basophils?",
      "answer": "Yes, allergic and inflammatory patterns can be associated with basophilia. The lab result still needs symptom context and comparison with eosinophils, total white blood cells, medications, and repeat CBC trends.",
      "pageTitle": "High Basophil Count | Basophilia, Absolute Basophils, Allergies, Thyroid, CBC Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 222,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When can high basophils raise a CML question?",
      "answer": "CML is more of a concern when basophilia appears with an abnormal CBC pattern such as very high white blood cells, left-shifted granulocytes, immature cells, enlarged spleen, or persistent/rising counts. BCR-ABL1 testing is used to confirm CML when the clinical and CBC pattern fits.",
      "pageTitle": "High Basophil Count | Basophilia, Absolute Basophils, Allergies, Thyroid, CBC Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 223,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should a mildly high basophil count be repeated?",
      "answer": "Often yes, especially if it is new and there is no clear temporary explanation. Repeat timing depends on the full CBC, symptoms, medications, and clinician judgment.",
      "pageTitle": "High Basophil Count | Basophilia, Absolute Basophils, Allergies, Thyroid, CBC Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 224,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What other tests may be ordered after high basophils?",
      "answer": "Depending on the pattern, follow-up may include a repeat CBC with differential, blood smear review, thyroid testing, inflammation or allergy evaluation, infection workup, BCR-ABL1 testing, JAK2/CALR/MPL testing, or hematology referral.",
      "pageTitle": "High Basophil Count | Basophilia, Absolute Basophils, Allergies, Thyroid, CBC Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 225,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is basopenia?",
      "answer": "Basopenia means a low basophil count. Because basophils are normally rare in blood, an isolated low result is often a small finding rather than a stand-alone diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Basophil Count | Basopenia, CBC Differential, Acute Infection, Steroid Medicines, Hyperthyroid Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 226,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a low basophil count normal?",
      "answer": "It can be. A low or zero basophil count is often not meaningful by itself if the rest of the CBC and differential are normal and there is no concerning symptom pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Basophil Count | Basopenia, CBC Differential, Acute Infection, Steroid Medicines, Hyperthyroid Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 227,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can infection or steroid medicines cause low basophils?",
      "answer": "Yes. Acute infection, corticosteroids, and some other medicines can be associated with basopenia. Medication timing matters, especially if the blood draw happened near treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Basophil Count | Basopenia, CBC Differential, Acute Infection, Steroid Medicines, Hyperthyroid Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 228,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does hyperthyroidism matter with low basophils?",
      "answer": "It can. Hyperthyroidism is one context where basopenia may appear, but the result is not diagnostic by itself. Thyroid testing and symptoms help determine whether the pattern fits.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Basophil Count | Basopenia, CBC Differential, Acute Infection, Steroid Medicines, Hyperthyroid Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 229,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include a repeat CBC with differential, review of the absolute basophil count, review of medications, and targeted testing when symptoms or the broader CBC point toward infection, thyroid disease, or another explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Basophil Count | Basopenia, CBC Differential, Acute Infection, Steroid Medicines, Hyperthyroid Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 230,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should low basophils be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Low basophils alone are rarely urgent. Prompt care matters if the result comes with fever, significant illness, other abnormal CBC results, or symptoms that point to infection or another serious problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Basophil Count | Basopenia, CBC Differential, Acute Infection, Steroid Medicines, Hyperthyroid Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 231,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does basophilic stippling mean on a blood smear?",
      "answer": "Basophilic stippling means red blood cells contain tiny blue granules on a stained smear. It is a morphology clue, not a diagnosis by itself, and it needs CBC and exposure context.",
      "pageTitle": "Basophilic Stippling on Blood Smear Interpretation | Lead, Thalassemia, Sideroblastic Anemia, and CBC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 232,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is coarse basophilic stippling more concerning than fine stippling?",
      "answer": "Coarse stippling is more classically linked to lead exposure and other significant disorders, while fine stippling can be less specific and sometimes needs repeat review to be sure it is real.",
      "pageTitle": "Basophilic Stippling on Blood Smear Interpretation | Lead, Thalassemia, Sideroblastic Anemia, and CBC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 233,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What tests usually follow basophilic stippling?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up tests include a repeat CBC with indices, reticulocyte count, iron studies, lead level if exposure is possible, hemoglobin electrophoresis, and hematology review of the smear.",
      "pageTitle": "Basophilic Stippling on Blood Smear Interpretation | Lead, Thalassemia, Sideroblastic Anemia, and CBC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 234,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can thalassemia cause basophilic stippling?",
      "answer": "Yes. Thalassemia can be associated with basophilic stippling, especially when the CBC shows microcytosis and the RBC count pattern suggests a hemoglobin production problem rather than simple iron deficiency.",
      "pageTitle": "Basophilic Stippling on Blood Smear Interpretation | Lead, Thalassemia, Sideroblastic Anemia, and CBC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 235,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can lead poisoning or sideroblastic anemia cause basophilic stippling?",
      "answer": "Yes. Lead poisoning and sideroblastic anemia are classic associations, and both can sit alongside microcytosis, anemia, abdominal symptoms, or other smear abnormalities.",
      "pageTitle": "Basophilic Stippling on Blood Smear Interpretation | Lead, Thalassemia, Sideroblastic Anemia, and CBC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 236,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can basophilic stippling be artifact?",
      "answer": "Yes. Smear quality, stain technique, and the exact appearance matter. If the finding is isolated or unclear, a repeat smear or pathology review may help confirm whether it is real.",
      "pageTitle": "Basophilic Stippling on Blood Smear Interpretation | Lead, Thalassemia, Sideroblastic Anemia, and CBC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/basophilic-stippling-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 237,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is there a commercial Baylisascaris test?",
      "answer": "CDC says there is no commercially available test. Suspected cases are usually handled with public-health or CDC help.",
      "pageTitle": "Baylisascaris Antibody Testing | Raccoon Roundworm, Serum, CSF, Eye Findings, and CDC Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 238,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why are eye findings important?",
      "answer": "Eye involvement can be a major clue and may need urgent specialist evaluation because the parasite can affect vision.",
      "pageTitle": "Baylisascaris Antibody Testing | Raccoon Roundworm, Serum, CSF, Eye Findings, and CDC Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 239,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can blood eosinophils help?",
      "answer": "Yes. Eosinophilia can support suspicion, but it does not diagnose Baylisascaris by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Baylisascaris Antibody Testing | Raccoon Roundworm, Serum, CSF, Eye Findings, and CDC Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 240,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a positive antibody mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. It has to be interpreted with symptoms, exposure, imaging, and specialist input.",
      "pageTitle": "Baylisascaris Antibody Testing | Raccoon Roundworm, Serum, CSF, Eye Findings, and CDC Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 241,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who usually coordinates testing?",
      "answer": "Clinicians often coordinate with public health departments or CDC when Baylisascaris is suspected.",
      "pageTitle": "Baylisascaris Antibody Testing | Raccoon Roundworm, Serum, CSF, Eye Findings, and CDC Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 242,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is this urgent?",
      "answer": "Vision changes, neurologic symptoms, or severe eosinophilia after high-risk raccoon exposure should prompt prompt medical attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Baylisascaris Antibody Testing | Raccoon Roundworm, Serum, CSF, Eye Findings, and CDC Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/baylisascaris-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 243,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is BCR-ABL1?",
      "answer": "BCR-ABL1 is an abnormal fusion gene created when parts of chromosomes 9 and 22 join together. It is the molecular hallmark of the Philadelphia chromosome.",
      "pageTitle": "BCR-ABL1 testing for CML | PCR monitoring, Philadelphia chromosome, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 244,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is BCR-ABL1 the same as the Philadelphia chromosome?",
      "answer": "They are closely linked. The Philadelphia chromosome is the chromosome change, and BCR-ABL1 is the fusion gene created by that change.",
      "pageTitle": "BCR-ABL1 testing for CML | PCR monitoring, Philadelphia chromosome, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 245,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a positive BCR-ABL1 test mean I have CML?",
      "answer": "A positive result strongly supports a BCR-ABL1-associated leukemia, but the full diagnosis still depends on the clinical setting, blood counts, smear, and sometimes marrow testing.",
      "pageTitle": "BCR-ABL1 testing for CML | PCR monitoring, Philadelphia chromosome, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 246,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why is quantitative PCR repeated so often?",
      "answer": "Because small changes in transcript level help show whether treatment is working and whether the molecular response is on track.",
      "pageTitle": "BCR-ABL1 testing for CML | PCR monitoring, Philadelphia chromosome, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 247,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can BCR-ABL1 testing be used as a general cancer screen?",
      "answer": "No. It is a targeted test used when there is a specific leukemia question, not a broad screen for healthy people.",
      "pageTitle": "BCR-ABL1 testing for CML | PCR monitoring, Philadelphia chromosome, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 248,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask if my result is low-level positive?",
      "answer": "Ask how the assay was performed, what the prior baseline was, whether the value is on the International Scale, and when the next test should happen.",
      "pageTitle": "BCR-ABL1 testing for CML | PCR monitoring, Philadelphia chromosome, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bcr-abl1-testing-cml.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 249,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is bile acid diarrhea the same as IBS-D?",
      "answer": "No. The symptoms can overlap, but bile acid diarrhea has a different mechanism and may respond to different treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Bile Acid Malabsorption Testing | Chronic Diarrhea, Serum C4, Fecal Bile Acids, and SeHCAT",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 250,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is SeHCAT available in the U.S.?",
      "answer": "Usually not. U.S. workups more often use serum C4, fecal bile acids, or a supervised treatment trial.",
      "pageTitle": "Bile Acid Malabsorption Testing | Chronic Diarrhea, Serum C4, Fecal Bile Acids, and SeHCAT",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 251,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a normal colonoscopy rule it out?",
      "answer": "No. Bile acid diarrhea can exist even when colonoscopy is normal.",
      "pageTitle": "Bile Acid Malabsorption Testing | Chronic Diarrhea, Serum C4, Fecal Bile Acids, and SeHCAT",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 252,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can celiac disease or microscopic colitis mimic this?",
      "answer": "Yes. Those are important alternative causes of chronic watery diarrhea that should be considered.",
      "pageTitle": "Bile Acid Malabsorption Testing | Chronic Diarrhea, Serum C4, Fecal Bile Acids, and SeHCAT",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 253,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if a bile acid binder helps?",
      "answer": "Improvement can support the diagnosis, but response alone is not as definitive as a strong objective test.",
      "pageTitle": "Bile Acid Malabsorption Testing | Chronic Diarrhea, Serum C4, Fecal Bile Acids, and SeHCAT",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 254,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if my local lab does not offer SeHCAT?",
      "answer": "In the U.S., clinicians often use serum C4, fecal bile acids, or a carefully monitored treatment trial instead of SeHCAT.",
      "pageTitle": "Bile Acid Malabsorption Testing | Chronic Diarrhea, Serum C4, Fecal Bile Acids, and SeHCAT",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 255,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "When should the workup be more urgent?",
      "answer": "Weight loss, blood in stool, nocturnal diarrhea, dehydration, or severe pain should push the workup toward prompt medical review.",
      "pageTitle": "Bile Acid Malabsorption Testing | Chronic Diarrhea, Serum C4, Fecal Bile Acids, and SeHCAT",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bile-acid-malabsorption-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 256,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a bilirubin blood test measure?",
      "answer": "A bilirubin blood test measures bilirubin, a yellow-orange substance made when the body breaks down old red blood cells. The liver processes bilirubin and moves it into bile so it can leave the body.",
      "pageTitle": "Bilirubin Blood Test Guide | High Bilirubin, Jaundice, Direct, Indirect, Liver, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 257,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the difference between total, direct, and indirect bilirubin?",
      "answer": "Total bilirubin is the overall amount. Direct bilirubin is conjugated bilirubin that has been processed by the liver. Indirect bilirubin is mostly unconjugated bilirubin, calculated from total and direct results, and can rise when red blood cells break down faster or when bilirubin processing is reduced.",
      "pageTitle": "Bilirubin Blood Test Guide | High Bilirubin, Jaundice, Direct, Indirect, Liver, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 258,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What can cause high bilirubin?",
      "answer": "High bilirubin can come from increased red blood cell breakdown, liver inflammation or injury, bile-duct blockage, inherited bilirubin-processing conditions such as Gilbert syndrome, newborn jaundice, medicines, alcohol-related disease, gallstones, hepatitis, or other liver and biliary conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Bilirubin Blood Test Guide | High Bilirubin, Jaundice, Direct, Indirect, Liver, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 259,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is high bilirubin urgent?",
      "answer": "Urgency depends on symptoms and context. Yellow skin or eyes with fever, severe abdominal pain, confusion, fainting, easy bleeding, very dark urine, pale stools, severe itching, pregnancy, or a sick newborn should be evaluated promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "Bilirubin Blood Test Guide | High Bilirubin, Jaundice, Direct, Indirect, Liver, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 260,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can Gilbert syndrome cause high bilirubin?",
      "answer": "Yes. Gilbert syndrome can cause mild, fluctuating unconjugated bilirubin elevation, often with otherwise normal liver tests. It is usually recognized in adolescence or adulthood and can be triggered by fasting, dehydration, illness, vigorous exercise, stress, or menstruation.",
      "pageTitle": "Bilirubin Blood Test Guide | High Bilirubin, Jaundice, Direct, Indirect, Liver, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bilirubin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 261,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do biological age tests measure?",
      "answer": "They estimate whether selected biomarkers look older or younger than chronological age, often using DNA methylation, blood markers, or a combined algorithm.",
      "pageTitle": "Biological Age Tests Guide | Epigenetic Clocks, Biomarkers, and Longevity Claims",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 262,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a lower biological age prove I am healthier?",
      "answer": "No. A lower score does not prove better function, lower disease risk, or longer life.",
      "pageTitle": "Biological Age Tests Guide | Epigenetic Clocks, Biomarkers, and Longevity Claims",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 263,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does repeatability matter?",
      "answer": "If a score jumps around from one sample to the next, it is hard to know whether a change is real or just noise.",
      "pageTitle": "Biological Age Tests Guide | Epigenetic Clocks, Biomarkers, and Longevity Claims",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 264,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What would make a claim stronger?",
      "answer": "Clear input disclosure, prospective validation, repeatability data, and evidence that score changes improve real outcomes would strengthen the claim.",
      "pageTitle": "Biological Age Tests Guide | Epigenetic Clocks, Biomarkers, and Longevity Claims",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 265,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a blood biomarker age score replace standard labs?",
      "answer": "No. Standard markers such as blood pressure, A1C, lipids, kidney function, symptoms, and clinician-directed tests remain more actionable.",
      "pageTitle": "Biological Age Tests Guide | Epigenetic Clocks, Biomarkers, and Longevity Claims",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 266,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should I trust a supplement program tied to the score?",
      "answer": "Be cautious. A score moving in the desired direction does not prove the supplement caused a meaningful health benefit.",
      "pageTitle": "Biological Age Tests Guide | Epigenetic Clocks, Biomarkers, and Longevity Claims",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/biological-age-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/biological-age-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 267,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are bite cells on a blood smear?",
      "answer": "Bite cells, also called degmacytes, are red blood cells with a bite-shaped defect from the edge. They usually reflect removal of a damaged hemoglobin inclusion rather than a diagnosis by themselves.",
      "pageTitle": "Bite Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Degmacytes, G6PD, Oxidative Hemolysis, Heinz Bodies, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 268,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What do bite cells suggest?",
      "answer": "They most often point to oxidative red-cell injury and hemolysis. G6PD deficiency is classic, but medicines, infections, fava beans, and unstable hemoglobins can also fit the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Bite Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Degmacytes, G6PD, Oxidative Hemolysis, Heinz Bodies, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 269,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the relationship between bite cells and Heinz bodies?",
      "answer": "Heinz bodies are denatured hemoglobin inclusions that may be missed on a routine smear. Splenic removal of those damaged areas can leave a bite cell behind.",
      "pageTitle": "Bite Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Degmacytes, G6PD, Oxidative Hemolysis, Heinz Bodies, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 270,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests usually follow bite cells?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up tests include a CBC, reticulocyte count, bilirubin, LDH, haptoglobin, creatinine, urine testing if hemolysis is suspected, and G6PD testing when the trigger pattern fits.",
      "pageTitle": "Bite Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Degmacytes, G6PD, Oxidative Hemolysis, Heinz Bodies, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 271,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can bite cells be seen after medicines or infections?",
      "answer": "Yes. Oxidant drugs and acute infections can trigger hemolysis in people with limited red-cell antioxidant defense, especially with G6PD deficiency.",
      "pageTitle": "Bite Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Degmacytes, G6PD, Oxidative Hemolysis, Heinz Bodies, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 272,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When are bite cells more urgent?",
      "answer": "They are more urgent when they appear with anemia symptoms, jaundice, dark urine, rising bilirubin, low haptoglobin, high LDH, or a clear recent oxidant exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "Bite Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Degmacytes, G6PD, Oxidative Hemolysis, Heinz Bodies, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 273,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Should G6PD testing wait until recovery?",
      "answer": "It often should. Acute hemolysis can make G6PD testing harder to interpret, so clinicians may repeat it after the episode settles if the timing is a concern.",
      "pageTitle": "Bite Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Degmacytes, G6PD, Oxidative Hemolysis, Heinz Bodies, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bite-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 274,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive Blastocystis stool test mean?",
      "answer": "It means Blastocystis was detected in the stool. That does not, by itself, prove it is the cause of symptoms or that treatment is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Blastocystis Stool Test Interpretation | What a Positive Means, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 275,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can Blastocystis be an incidental finding?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC notes that its clinical significance is controversial, so the result can be incidental or part of a broader picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Blastocystis Stool Test Interpretation | What a Positive Means, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 276,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is PCR better than ova and parasite microscopy?",
      "answer": "They answer slightly different questions. PCR can detect DNA, while ova and parasite exams look for organisms under the microscope. The best test depends on the clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "Blastocystis Stool Test Interpretation | What a Positive Means, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 277,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "How many stool samples are usually needed?",
      "answer": "For ova and parasite exams, multiple stool specimens collected on different days are often used because shedding can be intermittent.",
      "pageTitle": "Blastocystis Stool Test Interpretation | What a Positive Means, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 278,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do I need treatment if I feel fine?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. A positive test without symptoms often does not settle whether treatment will help.",
      "pageTitle": "Blastocystis Stool Test Interpretation | What a Positive Means, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 279,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I look for another cause?",
      "answer": "If symptoms are severe, prolonged, or accompanied by blood, fever, weight loss, dehydration, or immune suppression, another diagnosis should be considered promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "Blastocystis Stool Test Interpretation | What a Positive Means, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blastocystis-stool-test-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 280,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does it mean if blasts are reported on a CBC?",
      "answer": "Blasts are very immature blood-forming cells. If they are reported in peripheral blood or on a CBC differential, the result usually needs prompt clinician review, confirmation by smear or pathology review, and interpretation with the full CBC pattern and symptoms. It does not prove one diagnosis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Blasts on CBC | Peripheral Smear, Acute Leukemia Workup, Flow Cytometry, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 281,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do blasts on a CBC always mean leukemia?",
      "answer": "No single CBC line proves leukemia by itself, but blasts are an abnormal high-signal finding in peripheral blood and are part of acute leukemia workups. The next step is not self-interpretation; it is confirmation and clinician-directed evaluation, often with hematology input if the finding is real or concerning.",
      "pageTitle": "Blasts on CBC | Peripheral Smear, Acute Leukemia Workup, Flow Cytometry, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 282,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why are anemia and low platelets important when blasts are present?",
      "answer": "Blasts plus anemia, low platelets, low neutrophils, very high or very low white blood cell counts, or abnormal smear comments can suggest a broader bone marrow problem. Multiple abnormal cell lines usually raise the urgency of clinician review.",
      "pageTitle": "Blasts on CBC | Peripheral Smear, Acute Leukemia Workup, Flow Cytometry, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 283,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is the difference between immature granulocytes and blasts?",
      "answer": "Immature granulocytes are developing white blood cells in the granulocyte line, while blasts are earlier precursor cells. Automated analyzers and flags can be imperfect, so a manual smear or pathologist review may be needed when wording is unclear or concerning.",
      "pageTitle": "Blasts on CBC | Peripheral Smear, Acute Leukemia Workup, Flow Cytometry, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 284,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after blasts are reported?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include a repeat CBC with differential, manual peripheral smear review, hematopathology review, flow cytometry, bone marrow aspiration and biopsy, chromosome or molecular testing, and chemistry or coagulation tests when acute leukemia or complications are being evaluated.",
      "pageTitle": "Blasts on CBC | Peripheral Smear, Acute Leukemia Workup, Flow Cytometry, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 285,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should someone seek urgent help for blasts on CBC?",
      "answer": "Urgent medical guidance is important if blasts are reported with fever, infection, bleeding, easy bruising, severe fatigue, shortness of breath, fainting, confusion, chest pain, very abnormal white blood cell counts, anemia, low platelets, or a clinician or lab report recommending immediate review.",
      "pageTitle": "Blasts on CBC | Peripheral Smear, Acute Leukemia Workup, Flow Cytometry, and Urgent Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blasts-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 286,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a cuffless wearable replace a home blood pressure cuff?",
      "answer": "Usually not. For medical decisions, a validated upper-arm cuff is still the better standard.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Pressure Wearables | Cuffless Devices, Accuracy, and Home Monitoring",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 287,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do calibration and positioning matter so much?",
      "answer": "Wearables and wrist devices can drift or be position-sensitive, which makes trend interpretation tricky.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Pressure Wearables | Cuffless Devices, Accuracy, and Home Monitoring",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 288,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a wearable help with white-coat or masked hypertension?",
      "answer": "It may help you notice patterns, but confirmation usually still needs a validated cuff or ambulatory monitoring.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Pressure Wearables | Cuffless Devices, Accuracy, and Home Monitoring",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 289,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should pregnancy use a wearable reading?",
      "answer": "Pregnancy blood pressure concerns should be handled with a validated cuff and clinician guidance, not a trend estimate.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Pressure Wearables | Cuffless Devices, Accuracy, and Home Monitoring",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 290,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the wearable and cuff disagree?",
      "answer": "Trust the validated cuff for decisions and treat the wearable as a secondary trend signal.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Pressure Wearables | Cuffless Devices, Accuracy, and Home Monitoring",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 291,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is a reading urgent?",
      "answer": "Very high blood pressure with symptoms like chest pain, shortness of breath, severe headache, or neurologic symptoms needs prompt care.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Pressure Wearables | Cuffless Devices, Accuracy, and Home Monitoring",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 292,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "How is this different from ambulatory monitoring?",
      "answer": "Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring is a clinical test with validated equipment and defined measurement conditions; a consumer wearable estimate is not the same thing.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Pressure Wearables | Cuffless Devices, Accuracy, and Home Monitoring",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-pressure-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 293,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a reference range on a blood test?",
      "answer": "A reference range is the interval listed on a lab report for that specific test, lab, method, and unit. It helps compare your result with expected values, but it does not replace clinical interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Test Reference Ranges Guide | Normal, High, Low, Flags, Units, and Trends",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 294,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does an abnormal flag always mean disease?",
      "answer": "No. A high or low flag can matter, but interpretation depends on the test, how far outside the range it is, symptoms, history, medicines, specimen quality, preparation, and related results.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Test Reference Ranges Guide | Normal, High, Low, Flags, Units, and Trends",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 295,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can I compare my result with reference ranges from another lab or website?",
      "answer": "Usually not directly. MedlinePlus emphasizes using the reference range on your own lab report because labs may use different methods, units, and reference ranges.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Test Reference Ranges Guide | Normal, High, Low, Flags, Units, and Trends",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 296,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is the difference between normal and optimal lab results?",
      "answer": "Normal usually means the result is inside the lab's reference range. Optimal is often a wellness or risk-reduction claim and should be checked against clinical guidelines, outcomes evidence, and your medical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Blood Test Reference Ranges Guide | Normal, High, Low, Flags, Units, and Trends",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/blood-test-reference-ranges.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 297,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do BNP and NT-proBNP blood tests measure?",
      "answer": "BNP and NT-proBNP are natriuretic peptide blood tests. They rise when the heart is under stretch or pressure, and they are commonly used to help diagnose or rule out heart failure in people with symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "BNP and NT-proBNP Blood Test Guide | Heart Failure, Shortness of Breath, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 298,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a normal BNP or NT-proBNP rule out heart failure?",
      "answer": "A low BNP or NT-proBNP can make heart failure less likely in many symptomatic settings, especially when shortness of breath has an unclear cause. It does not replace clinical judgment, exam findings, ECG, imaging, or follow-up when symptoms are severe or changing.",
      "pageTitle": "BNP and NT-proBNP Blood Test Guide | Heart Failure, Shortness of Breath, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 299,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a high BNP or NT-proBNP mean heart failure?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. High values can support a heart-failure diagnosis, but kidney disease, older age, atrial fibrillation, pulmonary embolism, pulmonary hypertension, severe infection, and other cardiac strain can also raise natriuretic peptides.",
      "pageTitle": "BNP and NT-proBNP Blood Test Guide | Heart Failure, Shortness of Breath, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 300,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests may follow an abnormal BNP or NT-proBNP?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include an echocardiogram, ECG, chest imaging, kidney function tests, electrolytes, CBC, liver tests, thyroid testing, troponin, or D-dimer depending on symptoms and the suspected cause.",
      "pageTitle": "BNP and NT-proBNP Blood Test Guide | Heart Failure, Shortness of Breath, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 301,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Are BNP and NT-proBNP wellness or optimization tests?",
      "answer": "They are not general wellness scores. BNP and NT-proBNP are most useful when there is a specific question about heart failure, shortness of breath, swelling, known heart failure monitoring, or cardiac risk in a clinician-directed pathway.",
      "pageTitle": "BNP and NT-proBNP Blood Test Guide | Heart Failure, Shortness of Breath, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bnp-nt-probnp-heart-failure-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 302,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are body-composition scales accurate for body fat percentage?",
      "answer": "They can be directionally useful, but the exact percentage is an estimate that can move with hydration and device differences.",
      "pageTitle": "Body Composition Scale Accuracy | Bioelectrical Impedance, Hydration, DXA, and Trend Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 303,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do readings change after exercise or alcohol?",
      "answer": "Because those conditions change body water and conductance, which BIA uses to estimate composition.",
      "pageTitle": "Body Composition Scale Accuracy | Bioelectrical Impedance, Hydration, DXA, and Trend Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 304,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should I compare results across different brands?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Different devices use different electrodes and equations, so the numbers are not interchangeable.",
      "pageTitle": "Body Composition Scale Accuracy | Bioelectrical Impedance, Hydration, DXA, and Trend Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 305,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is a better test if I need a clinical answer?",
      "answer": "DXA or another standardized body-composition method is better when the exact number matters for a medical decision.",
      "pageTitle": "Body Composition Scale Accuracy | Bioelectrical Impedance, Hydration, DXA, and Trend Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 306,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Are these scales useless if they are not exact?",
      "answer": "No. They can still help with habit tracking if you care about the direction of change more than the precise value.",
      "pageTitle": "Body Composition Scale Accuracy | Bioelectrical Impedance, Hydration, DXA, and Trend Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 307,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do with a surprising reading?",
      "answer": "Repeat it under the same conditions before reacting, and ask whether a simple health marker like waist circumference, blood pressure, or A1C would be more actionable.",
      "pageTitle": "Body Composition Scale Accuracy | Bioelectrical Impedance, Hydration, DXA, and Trend Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/body-composition-scale-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 308,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is BRCA testing enough if the family history is strong?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, but not always. A genetic counselor can decide whether BRCA-only testing or a broader panel is more appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA Testing vs Broad Cancer Panels | Hereditary Risk, VUS, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 309,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When does a broader panel help?",
      "answer": "Broad panels can help when the cancer pattern is mixed, early-onset, or not explained by BRCA alone.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA Testing vs Broad Cancer Panels | Hereditary Risk, VUS, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 310,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why can broad panels be harder to interpret?",
      "answer": "They can increase the chance of variants of uncertain significance and unexpected findings that need counseling.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA Testing vs Broad Cancer Panels | Hereditary Risk, VUS, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 311,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative panel rule out hereditary cancer risk?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result does not erase family history, and the wrong gene set can miss the cause.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA Testing vs Broad Cancer Panels | Hereditary Risk, VUS, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 312,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should an affected relative be tested first?",
      "answer": "Often yes, because testing someone with cancer can give a clearer answer for the family.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA Testing vs Broad Cancer Panels | Hereditary Risk, VUS, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 313,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if I get a VUS?",
      "answer": "A variant of uncertain significance is usually not used to change management on its own; the result may be reclassified later.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA Testing vs Broad Cancer Panels | Hereditary Risk, VUS, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-testing-vs-broad-cancer-panels.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 314,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a BRCA VUS mean I have hereditary breast and ovarian cancer?",
      "answer": "No. A VUS is an uncertain finding, so it should not be treated as proof of a hereditary cancer syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA VUS Result Interpretation | Uncertain Variants, Family History, and Reclassification",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 315,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested for my BRCA VUS?",
      "answer": "Not as if it were a known harmful family mutation. Family testing usually depends on whether the variant is later reclassified and on the broader family history.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA VUS Result Interpretation | Uncertain Variants, Family History, and Reclassification",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 316,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a BRCA VUS become a positive result later?",
      "answer": "Yes. Labs review new evidence over time, and a VUS can be reclassified if the evidence changes.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA VUS Result Interpretation | Uncertain Variants, Family History, and Reclassification",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 317,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should a BRCA VUS change surgery or screening by itself?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Screening and prevention should still be guided by established risk factors, family history, and clinician advice.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA VUS Result Interpretation | Uncertain Variants, Family History, and Reclassification",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 318,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if my family history is strong even with a VUS?",
      "answer": "Family history can still justify more careful screening or counseling even when the BRCA result is uncertain.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA VUS Result Interpretation | Uncertain Variants, Family History, and Reclassification",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 319,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who can explain the report and reclassification process?",
      "answer": "A genetic counselor or the ordering clinician can explain the variant wording, possible reclassification, and the follow-up plan.",
      "pageTitle": "BRCA VUS Result Interpretation | Uncertain Variants, Family History, and Reclassification",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brca-vus-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 320,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a pathogenic BRIP1 result usually mean?",
      "answer": "A pathogenic or likely pathogenic BRIP1 result is usually most important for ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer risk counseling.",
      "pageTitle": "BRIP1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 321,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does BRIP1 automatically explain breast cancer risk?",
      "answer": "No. Breast-risk interpretation is less straightforward than for BRCA1 or BRCA2, so family history and current guidance matter.",
      "pageTitle": "BRIP1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 322,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is a BRIP1 VUS actionable?",
      "answer": "No. A BRIP1 variant of uncertain significance should not be treated like a confirmed harmful variant.",
      "pageTitle": "BRIP1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 323,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative BRIP1 result rule out inherited risk?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. A negative result is most reassuring when it was targeted to a known family variant; otherwise it can be uninformative.",
      "pageTitle": "BRIP1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 324,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a tumor-only BRIP1 finding prove inheritance?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only BRIP1 finding may reflect cancer tissue rather than inherited DNA and may need germline confirmation.",
      "pageTitle": "BRIP1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 325,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should get targeted family testing?",
      "answer": "Relatives are usually offered targeted testing when a confirmed familial pathogenic variant is known and the family is being counseled around inherited risk.",
      "pageTitle": "BRIP1 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/brip1-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 326,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high BUN/creatinine ratio mean?",
      "answer": "A high ratio can fit dehydration, reduced kidney blood flow, high protein intake, GI bleeding, catabolic illness, or low creatinine from low muscle mass. It is a clue, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "BUN/Creatinine Ratio | Kidney Function, Dehydration, and Interpretation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 327,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a high ratio always mean kidney disease?",
      "answer": "No. Kidney disease is only one possibility. The ratio must be read with the actual BUN, creatinine, eGFR, urine findings, symptoms, and trend.",
      "pageTitle": "BUN/Creatinine Ratio | Kidney Function, Dehydration, and Interpretation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 328,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can low muscle mass make the ratio look high?",
      "answer": "Yes. Low muscle mass can lower creatinine and make the ratio appear high even if kidney function is not the main issue.",
      "pageTitle": "BUN/Creatinine Ratio | Kidney Function, Dehydration, and Interpretation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 329,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can dehydration change the ratio?",
      "answer": "Yes. Dehydration often raises BUN more than creatinine, which can increase the ratio and make it look more kidney-related than it is.",
      "pageTitle": "BUN/Creatinine Ratio | Kidney Function, Dehydration, and Interpretation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 330,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does eGFR matter more than the ratio?",
      "answer": "eGFR is a more direct estimate of filtering function. The ratio can add context, but it should not replace eGFR or urine testing when kidney disease is the concern.",
      "pageTitle": "BUN/Creatinine Ratio | Kidney Function, Dehydration, and Interpretation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 331,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may come next?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up includes repeat BUN and creatinine, eGFR, urinalysis, urine albumin, blood pressure review, and sometimes more kidney-focused evaluation if the pattern persists.",
      "pageTitle": "BUN/Creatinine Ratio | Kidney Function, Dehydration, and Interpretation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bun-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 332,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are burr cells on a blood smear?",
      "answer": "Burr cells are red blood cells with many short, fairly regular surface projections. They are also called echinocytes.",
      "pageTitle": "Burr Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Echinocytes, Kidney Failure, Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency, and Artifact",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 333,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are burr cells always a sign of disease?",
      "answer": "No. Burr cells can be caused by smear or storage artifact. The sample quality matters as much as the smear finding itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Burr Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Echinocytes, Kidney Failure, Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency, and Artifact",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 334,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What conditions are associated with burr cells?",
      "answer": "They can appear with kidney failure or uremia, pyruvate kinase deficiency, some metabolic or illness contexts, and occasionally after transfusion of older stored blood.",
      "pageTitle": "Burr Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Echinocytes, Kidney Failure, Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency, and Artifact",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 335,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests usually follow burr cells?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up tests include repeat smear review, creatinine, BUN, eGFR, electrolytes, anemia labs, and sometimes a hematology review if the pattern is persistent or unexplained.",
      "pageTitle": "Burr Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Echinocytes, Kidney Failure, Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency, and Artifact",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 336,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "How are burr cells different from acanthocytes?",
      "answer": "Burr cells have many small, usually more uniform projections, while acanthocytes have fewer, irregular, blunter spicules. The distinction matters because the causes differ.",
      "pageTitle": "Burr Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Echinocytes, Kidney Failure, Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency, and Artifact",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 337,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When are burr cells more concerning?",
      "answer": "They matter more when they are persistent, seen on a well-prepared smear, or paired with kidney dysfunction, hemolysis, or unexplained anemia.",
      "pageTitle": "Burr Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Echinocytes, Kidney Failure, Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency, and Artifact",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/burr-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 338,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is BV testing the same as STI testing?",
      "answer": "No. BV testing evaluates bacterial vaginosis, a vaginal microbiome imbalance. It can overlap with STI risk and symptoms, but it does not replace tests for chlamydia, gonorrhea, HIV, syphilis, trichomoniasis, hepatitis, or other STIs.",
      "pageTitle": "BV and Yeast Testing vs STI Testing | Vaginitis Swabs and Panel Gaps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bv-yeast-test-vs-sti.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bv-yeast-test-vs-sti.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bv-yeast-test-vs-sti.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 339,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a yeast infection test an STI test?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says vulvovaginal candidiasis is usually not sexually transmitted. Yeast testing can help explain vaginal symptoms, but separate STI testing may still be needed depending on symptoms and exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "BV and Yeast Testing vs STI Testing | Vaginitis Swabs and Panel Gaps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bv-yeast-test-vs-sti.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/bv-yeast-test-vs-sti.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/bv-yeast-test-vs-sti.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 340,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive C. diff test mean?",
      "answer": "It means C. difficile or its toxin-producing genetic material or toxins were detected in stool, but the result still has to match the symptom story before it is treated as infection.",
      "pageTitle": "C. diff Testing | Stool PCR, Toxin Tests, Antibiotics, Diarrhea, and Colonization",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 341,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can PCR be positive without true infection?",
      "answer": "PCR and NAAT are sensitive and can stay positive in colonization, so a positive result without compatible diarrhea can overcall disease.",
      "pageTitle": "C. diff Testing | Stool PCR, Toxin Tests, Antibiotics, Diarrhea, and Colonization",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 342,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When does toxin testing matter most?",
      "answer": "Toxin testing matters when the clinician is trying to separate colonization from toxin-mediated disease and decide whether the stool result really explains the illness.",
      "pageTitle": "C. diff Testing | Stool PCR, Toxin Tests, Antibiotics, Diarrhea, and Colonization",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 343,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should repeat testing be used as a test of cure?",
      "answer": "Usually not. PCR and other stool markers can stay positive after symptoms improve, so repeat testing often does not answer the main question.",
      "pageTitle": "C. diff Testing | Stool PCR, Toxin Tests, Antibiotics, Diarrhea, and Colonization",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 344,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should symptoms make the result more urgent?",
      "answer": "New diarrhea after antibiotics, severe abdominal pain, fever, dehydration, blood in stool, or rising blood counts deserve faster clinical review.",
      "pageTitle": "C. diff Testing | Stool PCR, Toxin Tests, Antibiotics, Diarrhea, and Colonization",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 345,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the stool was formed or symptoms were mild?",
      "answer": "That lowers the chance that a positive test reflects active C. diff infection and raises the chance that colonization or another cause is involved.",
      "pageTitle": "C. diff Testing | Stool PCR, Toxin Tests, Antibiotics, Diarrhea, and Colonization",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/c-diff-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/c-diff-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 346,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are Cabot rings on a blood smear?",
      "answer": "Cabot rings are rare ring-shaped or figure-eight red blood cell inclusions seen on a peripheral blood smear. They are a morphology clue, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Cabot Rings on Blood Smear Interpretation | Megaloblastic Anemia, Marrow Stress, and Vitamin B12/Folate Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 347,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What do Cabot rings suggest?",
      "answer": "They most often raise megaloblastic anemia or marrow-stress questions, especially when macrocytosis, macro-ovalocytes, or hypersegmented neutrophils are also present.",
      "pageTitle": "Cabot Rings on Blood Smear Interpretation | Megaloblastic Anemia, Marrow Stress, and Vitamin B12/Folate Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 348,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are Cabot rings always abnormal?",
      "answer": "They are unusual enough that they deserve attention, but the meaning depends on the full CBC and smear picture rather than the ring-shaped inclusion alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Cabot Rings on Blood Smear Interpretation | Megaloblastic Anemia, Marrow Stress, and Vitamin B12/Folate Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 349,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests usually follow Cabot rings?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up tests include vitamin B12, folate, CBC indices, reticulocyte count, iron studies, and sometimes hematology review if the smear is unclear or other cytopenias are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Cabot Rings on Blood Smear Interpretation | Megaloblastic Anemia, Marrow Stress, and Vitamin B12/Folate Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 350,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can vitamin B12 or folate deficiency be involved?",
      "answer": "Yes. Cabot rings are classically associated with megaloblastic anemia, which can be caused by vitamin B12 or folate deficiency.",
      "pageTitle": "Cabot Rings on Blood Smear Interpretation | Megaloblastic Anemia, Marrow Stress, and Vitamin B12/Folate Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 351,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When are Cabot rings more concerning?",
      "answer": "They are more concerning when they appear with macrocytosis, anemia, neurologic symptoms, other abnormal cells, or persistent cytopenias that suggest marrow disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Cabot Rings on Blood Smear Interpretation | Megaloblastic Anemia, Marrow Stress, and Vitamin B12/Folate Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 352,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Do Cabot rings mean leukemia or myelodysplasia?",
      "answer": "Not by themselves. Those diagnoses need the broader CBC, smear, and clinical pattern, especially if blasts, persistent cytopenias, or other dysplastic features are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Cabot Rings on Blood Smear Interpretation | Megaloblastic Anemia, Marrow Stress, and Vitamin B12/Folate Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cabot-rings-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 353,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a calcium blood test measure?",
      "answer": "A calcium blood test measures calcium in the blood, not total calcium stored in bones. Total calcium includes calcium attached to proteins such as albumin plus free calcium; ionized calcium measures the active free form more directly.",
      "pageTitle": "Calcium Blood Test Guide | Total Calcium, Ionized Calcium, Albumin, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 354,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the difference between total calcium and ionized calcium?",
      "answer": "Total calcium measures all blood calcium, including protein-bound calcium. Ionized calcium measures free calcium that is not attached to proteins and is often used when albumin, protein binding, severe illness, surgery, or acid-base changes make total calcium harder to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "Calcium Blood Test Guide | Total Calcium, Ionized Calcium, Albumin, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 355,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does albumin matter for calcium results?",
      "answer": "A large share of blood calcium is bound to proteins, mainly albumin. Low albumin can make total calcium look low even when ionized calcium is less concerning, so clinicians may use corrected calcium or order ionized calcium.",
      "pageTitle": "Calcium Blood Test Guide | Total Calcium, Ionized Calcium, Albumin, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 356,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Which tests are usually interpreted with calcium?",
      "answer": "Calcium is often interpreted with albumin, creatinine, eGFR, magnesium, phosphorus or phosphate, PTH, 25(OH)D vitamin D, alkaline phosphatase, and sometimes urine calcium depending on the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Calcium Blood Test Guide | Total Calcium, Ionized Calcium, Albumin, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 357,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should you change calcium or vitamin D supplements based on one calcium result?",
      "answer": "Do not start, stop, or sharply change calcium, vitamin D, antacids, or other supplements based only on one calcium value. Ask whether the result should be repeated and interpreted with albumin, PTH, vitamin D, kidney function, medicines, and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Calcium Blood Test Guide | Total Calcium, Ionized Calcium, Albumin, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calcium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calcium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 358,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are CALR and MPL testing used for?",
      "answer": "They are used in the workup of myeloproliferative neoplasms, especially when essential thrombocythemia or myelofibrosis is suspected and JAK2 testing is negative or incomplete.",
      "pageTitle": "CALR and MPL testing for MPNs | JAK2 reflex panels for ET and myelofibrosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 359,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is JAK2 often checked before CALR or MPL?",
      "answer": "JAK2 is a common first-line driver in suspected myeloproliferative neoplasms. If it is positive, the workup may already have a strong clonal clue; if it is negative, CALR and MPL can help fill in the next step.",
      "pageTitle": "CALR and MPL testing for MPNs | JAK2 reflex panels for ET and myelofibrosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 360,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do CALR or MPL results diagnose cancer by themselves?",
      "answer": "No. They support a diagnosis in the right clinical setting, but CBC trends, smear review, symptoms, spleen findings, and sometimes bone marrow evaluation still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "CALR and MPL testing for MPNs | JAK2 reflex panels for ET and myelofibrosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 361,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a negative CALR or MPL test rule out an MPN?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result does not rule out all myeloproliferative neoplasms, and many workups also consider JAK2, CBC trend, EPO, iron studies, and marrow findings.",
      "pageTitle": "CALR and MPL testing for MPNs | JAK2 reflex panels for ET and myelofibrosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 362,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Are CALR and MPL mutations inherited?",
      "answer": "Usually no. In the common MPN setting these are usually somatic mutations acquired in blood-forming cells rather than inherited family variants.",
      "pageTitle": "CALR and MPL testing for MPNs | JAK2 reflex panels for ET and myelofibrosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 363,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before acting on the result?",
      "answer": "Ask whether JAK2 was already done, whether the platelet or hematocrit pattern was persistent, whether reactive causes were considered, and whether hematology review or marrow testing is still needed.",
      "pageTitle": "CALR and MPL testing for MPNs | JAK2 reflex panels for ET and myelofibrosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/calr-mpl-testing-myeloproliferative-neoplasms.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 364,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the difference between Campylobacter culture and PCR?",
      "answer": "Culture tries to grow the organism and can provide an isolate, while PCR or another culture-independent diagnostic test detects Campylobacter genetic material more quickly.",
      "pageTitle": "Campylobacter Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 365,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always. It is strongest when diarrhea, fever, abdominal pain, bloody stool, and exposure timing fit Campylobacter gastroenteritis.",
      "pageTitle": "Campylobacter Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 366,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why might reflex culture still be ordered?",
      "answer": "Culture can help with antimicrobial susceptibility testing, isolate storage, and public-health follow-up when a lab or outbreak program needs more than a PCR result.",
      "pageTitle": "Campylobacter Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 367,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What exposures make Campylobacter more likely?",
      "answer": "Undercooked poultry, raw milk, contaminated water, travel, animal exposure, and outbreak context all raise suspicion.",
      "pageTitle": "Campylobacter Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 368,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can symptoms improve before the result is reviewed?",
      "answer": "Yes. The test can still matter if diarrhea was recent, severe, bloody, or occurred in a high-risk patient.",
      "pageTitle": "Campylobacter Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 369,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get urgent medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care promptly for dehydration, blood in stool, persistent fever, severe abdominal pain, pregnancy, immune compromise, or other red-flag symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Campylobacter Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/campylobacter-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 370,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is carrier screening?",
      "answer": "It is a genetic test that looks for variants you could pass to a child. It is usually done before or during pregnancy planning.",
      "pageTitle": "Carrier screening genetic test | pregnancy planning, residual risk, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 371,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive carrier result mean I am sick?",
      "answer": "Usually no. It means you carry a variant and may need partner testing or counseling to understand reproductive risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Carrier screening genetic test | pregnancy planning, residual risk, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 372,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is a negative result not zero risk?",
      "answer": "Because panels only test selected variants and may not catch every possible disease-causing change. That is residual risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Carrier screening genetic test | pregnancy planning, residual risk, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 373,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should my partner be tested too?",
      "answer": "Often yes if you are positive, or if your family history suggests a shared inherited condition. ACOG commonly recommends testing the partner first or alongside you depending on the situation.",
      "pageTitle": "Carrier screening genetic test | pregnancy planning, residual risk, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 374,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is expanded carrier screening always better?",
      "answer": "Not always. Expanded panels can find more carriers, but they can also make interpretation more complex and may not be the best fit for every family.",
      "pageTitle": "Carrier screening genetic test | pregnancy planning, residual risk, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 375,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I talk with a genetic counselor?",
      "answer": "Before testing if you have a family history or pregnancy-planning question, and after testing if a result could change reproductive decisions or if both partners might be carriers.",
      "pageTitle": "Carrier screening genetic test | pregnancy planning, residual risk, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/carrier-screening-genetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 376,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a CBC blood test measure?",
      "answer": "A CBC measures major blood-cell patterns, including red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, hemoglobin, hematocrit, and mean corpuscular volume. A CBC with differential adds the counts or percentages of white blood cell types.",
      "pageTitle": "CBC Blood Test Guide | Complete Blood Count Markers, Differential, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cbc-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cbc-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cbc-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 377,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do you need to fast for a CBC?",
      "answer": "Usually no special preparation is needed for a CBC. Fasting may be required if other tests are drawn at the same visit, so follow the instructions from the ordering clinician or lab.",
      "pageTitle": "CBC Blood Test Guide | Complete Blood Count Markers, Differential, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cbc-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cbc-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cbc-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 378,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a CBC diagnose the cause of anemia, infection, or platelet problems?",
      "answer": "A CBC can show patterns that point toward anemia, infection, inflammation, bleeding or clotting issues, medication effects, marrow stress, or other conditions, but the cause often requires symptoms, trends, repeat testing, smear review, iron studies, B12 or folate testing, or other follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "CBC Blood Test Guide | Complete Blood Count Markers, Differential, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cbc-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cbc-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cbc-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 379,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why should I keep eating gluten before testing?",
      "answer": "Because the antibody blood tests are most accurate when your immune system is still being exposed to gluten. Removing gluten too soon can make the tests look falsely normal.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac Disease Blood Tests | tTG-IgA, Total IgA, Gluten, Biopsy, and HLA Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 380,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the most common first-line blood test?",
      "answer": "tTG-IgA is usually the first screening test, often paired with total IgA so the result is easier to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac Disease Blood Tests | tTG-IgA, Total IgA, Gluten, Biopsy, and HLA Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 381,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What if my IgA is low?",
      "answer": "Low IgA can make IgA-based screening less reliable, so clinicians may switch to IgG-based tests such as DGP-IgG or tTG-IgG.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac Disease Blood Tests | tTG-IgA, Total IgA, Gluten, Biopsy, and HLA Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 382,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a positive HLA-DQ2 or DQ8 test mean I have celiac disease?",
      "answer": "No. It means you carry a genetic risk pattern, not that you definitely have the disease. A negative result is more useful for ruling celiac disease out.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac Disease Blood Tests | tTG-IgA, Total IgA, Gluten, Biopsy, and HLA Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 383,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why would biopsy still be needed after blood tests?",
      "answer": "Because blood tests suggest the diagnosis, but a duodenal biopsy is commonly used to confirm it when the situation is not already definitive.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac Disease Blood Tests | tTG-IgA, Total IgA, Gluten, Biopsy, and HLA Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 384,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can celiac disease look like iron deficiency or IBS?",
      "answer": "Yes. That is why unexplained iron deficiency, bone loss, infertility, fatigue, or chronic bowel symptoms often prompt testing even when the GI symptoms are not dramatic.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac Disease Blood Tests | tTG-IgA, Total IgA, Gluten, Biopsy, and HLA Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/celiac-disease-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 385,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does ceruloplasmin measure?",
      "answer": "It measures a copper-carrying protein made by the liver. The result helps clinicians think about copper handling, but it does not diagnose a condition by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Ceruloplasmin Blood Test | Wilson Disease, Copper Deficiency, High Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 386,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does low ceruloplasmin mean Wilson disease?",
      "answer": "No. Low ceruloplasmin can fit Wilson disease, but it can also show up with copper deficiency, malnutrition, malabsorption, kidney protein loss, severe liver disease, and rare genetic disorders.",
      "pageTitle": "Ceruloplasmin Blood Test | Wilson Disease, Copper Deficiency, High Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 387,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can normal ceruloplasmin rule out Wilson disease?",
      "answer": "No. GeneReviews notes that some people with Wilson disease have normal ceruloplasmin, especially when the rest of the clinical picture still fits.",
      "pageTitle": "Ceruloplasmin Blood Test | Wilson Disease, Copper Deficiency, High Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 388,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What can make ceruloplasmin high?",
      "answer": "Inflammation, pregnancy, birth control pills, and estrogen therapy can raise ceruloplasmin, so a high result is not automatically a problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Ceruloplasmin Blood Test | Wilson Disease, Copper Deficiency, High Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 389,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why is urine copper often ordered with this test?",
      "answer": "Because ceruloplasmin alone is not enough. 24-hour urine copper helps show whether excess copper is actually being lost in the urine, which can support a Wilson disease workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Ceruloplasmin Blood Test | Wilson Disease, Copper Deficiency, High Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 390,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can low ceruloplasmin mean copper deficiency instead?",
      "answer": "Yes. Low ceruloplasmin with low serum copper can fit copper deficiency or another copper-handling disorder, so the pattern needs context rather than a one-test answer.",
      "pageTitle": "Ceruloplasmin Blood Test | Wilson Disease, Copper Deficiency, High Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ceruloplasmin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 391,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can CGM help a person without diabetes?",
      "answer": "It can provide feedback about patterns, but the evidence for broad wellness use is more limited than for diabetes management.",
      "pageTitle": "CGM for Non-Diabetics | Continuous Glucose Monitors, Wellness Claims, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 392,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Should I use CGM instead of A1C or fasting glucose?",
      "answer": "No. CGM is not a replacement for standard blood tests when the question is diabetes screening or diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "CGM for Non-Diabetics | Continuous Glucose Monitors, Wellness Claims, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 393,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do smartwatch glucose claims count as CGM?",
      "answer": "No. FDA warns against devices that claim to measure blood glucose without piercing the skin unless they are authorized for a specific intended use.",
      "pageTitle": "CGM for Non-Diabetics | Continuous Glucose Monitors, Wellness Claims, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 394,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is the biggest risk of overinterpreting CGM?",
      "answer": "Unnecessary food restriction, anxiety, or assuming a pattern proves a diagnosis when it may just be a temporary or device-related fluctuation.",
      "pageTitle": "CGM for Non-Diabetics | Continuous Glucose Monitors, Wellness Claims, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 395,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should a person with symptoms get standard testing?",
      "answer": "If diabetes symptoms, unusual thirst, frequent urination, weight loss, or other concerning signs are present, standard testing matters more than trend watching.",
      "pageTitle": "CGM for Non-Diabetics | Continuous Glucose Monitors, Wellness Claims, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 396,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I compare a CGM with?",
      "answer": "Compare it with A1C, fasting glucose, symptoms, and the clinical question you are actually trying to answer.",
      "pageTitle": "CGM for Non-Diabetics | Continuous Glucose Monitors, Wellness Claims, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cgm-for-non-diabetics.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 397,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a Chagas antibody test look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for evidence of infection with Trypanosoma cruzi, usually in the chronic phase.",
      "pageTitle": "Chagas Disease Antibody Testing | Trypanosoma cruzi, Latin America Exposure, Blood Donor Screening, and Confirmation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 398,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a donor screening test diagnose Chagas disease?",
      "answer": "No. Donor screening is not the same as a clinical diagnostic workup and usually needs confirmation.",
      "pageTitle": "Chagas Disease Antibody Testing | Trypanosoma cruzi, Latin America Exposure, Blood Donor Screening, and Confirmation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 399,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why might someone have no symptoms?",
      "answer": "Many chronic infections are silent for years before heart or digestive complications appear.",
      "pageTitle": "Chagas Disease Antibody Testing | Trypanosoma cruzi, Latin America Exposure, Blood Donor Screening, and Confirmation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 400,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a positive antibody result show organ damage?",
      "answer": "No. It shows exposure or infection evidence, not whether the heart or digestive system is already affected.",
      "pageTitle": "Chagas Disease Antibody Testing | Trypanosoma cruzi, Latin America Exposure, Blood Donor Screening, and Confirmation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 401,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who may need testing in a family?",
      "answer": "Pregnancy and congenital-risk context can change who should be evaluated, especially if there was maternal exposure risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Chagas Disease Antibody Testing | Trypanosoma cruzi, Latin America Exposure, Blood Donor Screening, and Confirmation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 402,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What would make the result more actionable?",
      "answer": "A second confirmatory assay and follow-up evaluation for ECG, echocardiogram, or infectious disease consultation make the result more useful.",
      "pageTitle": "Chagas Disease Antibody Testing | Trypanosoma cruzi, Latin America Exposure, Blood Donor Screening, and Confirmation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chagas-disease-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 403,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a pathogenic CHEK2 result usually mean?",
      "answer": "A pathogenic or likely pathogenic CHEK2 result is most strongly tied to breast cancer risk and can affect screening and family testing, with other cancer questions depending on the exact variant and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "CHEK2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Colon, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 404,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is the colon cancer link settled?",
      "answer": "Not fully. Colon risk guidance has changed over time, so current clinician guidance and family history matter more than a headline.",
      "pageTitle": "CHEK2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Colon, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 405,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What about prostate cancer risk?",
      "answer": "Prostate screening may be discussed for some male CHEK2 carriers, especially when family history is strong.",
      "pageTitle": "CHEK2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Colon, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 406,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a tumor-only CHEK2 finding prove inheritance?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only CHEK2 finding may reflect cancer tissue or another non-inherited context and may need germline confirmation.",
      "pageTitle": "CHEK2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Colon, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 407,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is a CHEK2 VUS actionable?",
      "answer": "No. A CHEK2 variant of uncertain significance should not be treated like a confirmed harmful variant.",
      "pageTitle": "CHEK2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Colon, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 408,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who in the family should test first?",
      "answer": "A genetics-aware clinician usually starts with the most informative person or the known familial variant, rather than testing everyone at once.",
      "pageTitle": "CHEK2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Colon, Prostate Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chek2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 409,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can chlamydia and gonorrhea have no symptoms?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC notes that asymptomatic infection is common, so screening may be recommended based on age, anatomy, partners, pregnancy, exposure site, and risk factors rather than symptoms alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Testing Guide | Urine, Swabs, NAAT, Throat, Rectal, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 410,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a urine test enough for chlamydia and gonorrhea?",
      "answer": "Sometimes. Urine can be used for some urogenital testing, especially first-catch urine, but it does not test throat or rectal sites. Vaginal, cervical, urethral, throat, or rectal swabs may be needed depending on anatomy and exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Testing Guide | Urine, Swabs, NAAT, Throat, Rectal, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 411,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is a NAAT test for chlamydia and gonorrhea?",
      "answer": "NAAT stands for nucleic acid amplification test. CDC describes NAATs as sensitive tests for detecting chlamydia and gonorrhea from approved specimen types such as urine or swabs.",
      "pageTitle": "Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Testing Guide | Urine, Swabs, NAAT, Throat, Rectal, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 412,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do throat or rectal exposures need different STI testing?",
      "answer": "They can. Chlamydia or gonorrhea at the throat or rectum may be missed if only urine or genital testing is done. Ask whether pharyngeal or rectal NAAT testing is appropriate for the sites that were exposed.",
      "pageTitle": "Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Testing Guide | Urine, Swabs, NAAT, Throat, Rectal, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 413,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can chlamydia and gonorrhea be tested with self-collected samples?",
      "answer": "Yes in some settings. CDC discusses patient-collected vaginal and rectal swabs for NAAT testing, and FDA has authorized an over-the-counter chlamydia and gonorrhea test with at-home sample collection for adults.",
      "pageTitle": "Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Testing Guide | Urine, Swabs, NAAT, Throat, Rectal, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 414,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What happens after a positive chlamydia or gonorrhea test?",
      "answer": "CDC says chlamydia and gonorrhea can be cured with the right medicine from a health care provider. Follow-up often includes treatment, partner steps, avoiding sex until treatment guidance is complete, and retesting around 3 months after treatment because reinfection is common.",
      "pageTitle": "Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Testing Guide | Urine, Swabs, NAAT, Throat, Rectal, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chlamydia-gonorrhea-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 415,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do chloride and CO2 look at together?",
      "answer": "They help clinicians interpret fluid balance and acid-base balance. Read together, they can point toward dehydration, vomiting, diarrhea, breathing-related compensation, kidney issues, or medication effects.",
      "pageTitle": "Chloride and CO2/Bicarbonate Blood Test | Electrolyte and Acid-Base Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 416,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is CO2 on my chemistry panel the same as bicarbonate?",
      "answer": "On many chemistry panels, the CO2 value mostly reflects bicarbonate or total carbon dioxide. It is not the same thing as a blood gas, but it is often used as a clue for acid-base balance.",
      "pageTitle": "Chloride and CO2/Bicarbonate Blood Test | Electrolyte and Acid-Base Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 417,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can vomiting or diarrhea change chloride and CO2?",
      "answer": "Yes. Vomiting can push chloride down and bicarbonate up, while diarrhea can push bicarbonate down and sometimes chloride up. The full pattern and the symptoms matter more than one value alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Chloride and CO2/Bicarbonate Blood Test | Electrolyte and Acid-Base Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 418,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does the anion gap matter?",
      "answer": "The anion gap helps sort some low-bicarbonate patterns into high-gap or normal-gap metabolic acidosis. That can change the next tests that are ordered, such as glucose, ketones, lactate, blood gas, or kidney testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Chloride and CO2/Bicarbonate Blood Test | Electrolyte and Acid-Base Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 419,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I worry about one abnormal result?",
      "answer": "Not always. Mild changes can be temporary or related to hydration, medicines, or sample variation. New or large changes with symptoms, kidney problems, breathing trouble, or confusion deserve quicker follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Chloride and CO2/Bicarbonate Blood Test | Electrolyte and Acid-Base Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 420,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up tests may be ordered?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up may include repeat electrolytes, sodium, potassium, creatinine, eGFR, glucose, albumin, blood gas, and sometimes lactate or ketone testing if acidosis is a concern.",
      "pageTitle": "Chloride and CO2/Bicarbonate Blood Test | Electrolyte and Acid-Base Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/chloride-co2-bicarbonate-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 421,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does CLIA certification mean FDA approved?",
      "answer": "No. CLIA certification relates to the laboratory's authority and quality requirements for testing human specimens. FDA approval, clearance, or authorization relates to a specific test or device and its intended use.",
      "pageTitle": "CLIA-Certified Lab vs FDA-Authorized Test | What Those Labels Mean",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clia-certified-lab-fda-authorized-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/clia-certified-lab-fda-authorized-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clia-certified-lab-fda-authorized-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 422,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does FDA authorization mean a test is right for me?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. FDA authorization applies to a specific intended use. The test still has to match your symptoms, risk, specimen, timing, and follow-up needs.",
      "pageTitle": "CLIA-Certified Lab vs FDA-Authorized Test | What Those Labels Mean",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clia-certified-lab-fda-authorized-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/clia-certified-lab-fda-authorized-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clia-certified-lab-fda-authorized-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 423,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Clonorchis or Opisthorchis testing help with?",
      "answer": "It can support evaluation of liver fluke infection when raw freshwater fish exposure, bile duct symptoms, or stool eggs make the question plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "Clonorchis and Opisthorchis Antibody Testing | Liver Flukes, Stool Eggs, Raw Fish, Bile Duct Disease, and Cancer Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 424,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a positive antibody prove active infection?",
      "answer": "No. Antibody results may reflect past exposure and need stool, imaging, liver tests, and exposure history for context.",
      "pageTitle": "Clonorchis and Opisthorchis Antibody Testing | Liver Flukes, Stool Eggs, Raw Fish, Bile Duct Disease, and Cancer Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 425,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why are stool eggs important?",
      "answer": "Egg detection is the main way these infections are usually confirmed, especially when infection is active enough to shed eggs.",
      "pageTitle": "Clonorchis and Opisthorchis Antibody Testing | Liver Flukes, Stool Eggs, Raw Fish, Bile Duct Disease, and Cancer Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 426,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does fish exposure matter so much?",
      "answer": "These liver flukes are foodborne and are associated with raw or undercooked freshwater fish in endemic regions.",
      "pageTitle": "Clonorchis and Opisthorchis Antibody Testing | Liver Flukes, Stool Eggs, Raw Fish, Bile Duct Disease, and Cancer Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 427,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can liver imaging help?",
      "answer": "Yes. Ultrasound, CT, or MRI can support the diagnosis when bile duct changes or other hepatobiliary clues are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Clonorchis and Opisthorchis Antibody Testing | Liver Flukes, Stool Eggs, Raw Fish, Bile Duct Disease, and Cancer Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 428,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician familiar with travel-related parasites, hepatobiliary disease, or infectious disease consultation usually adds the most value.",
      "pageTitle": "Clonorchis and Opisthorchis Antibody Testing | Liver Flukes, Stool Eggs, Raw Fish, Bile Duct Disease, and Cancer Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/clonorchis-opisthorchis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 429,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are coagulation factor assays?",
      "answer": "Coagulation factor assays are blood tests that measure the amount or activity of specific clotting factors, such as factor VIII, IX, XI, or fibrinogen.",
      "pageTitle": "Coagulation Factor Assays | Factor VIII, IX, XI, Fibrinogen, Bleeding Workups, and Inhibitors",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 430,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why are factor assays ordered?",
      "answer": "They are usually ordered after bleeding symptoms, family history, PT/INR, aPTT, or a mixing study suggests a specific clotting-factor problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Coagulation Factor Assays | Factor VIII, IX, XI, Fibrinogen, Bleeding Workups, and Inhibitors",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 431,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a prolonged aPTT suggest?",
      "answer": "A prolonged aPTT can point toward factor VIII, IX, XI, or XII problems, or toward an inhibitor that needs more testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Coagulation Factor Assays | Factor VIII, IX, XI, Fibrinogen, Bleeding Workups, and Inhibitors",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 432,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does a prolonged PT suggest?",
      "answer": "A prolonged PT can point toward factor VII or common-pathway problems, or to liver, vitamin K, warfarin, or consumptive causes.",
      "pageTitle": "Coagulation Factor Assays | Factor VIII, IX, XI, Fibrinogen, Bleeding Workups, and Inhibitors",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 433,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can factor assays diagnose hemophilia?",
      "answer": "Yes. Factor VIII and IX assays are part of the workup for hemophilia A and hemophilia B, and they help gauge severity.",
      "pageTitle": "Coagulation Factor Assays | Factor VIII, IX, XI, Fibrinogen, Bleeding Workups, and Inhibitors",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 434,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What else can affect factor results?",
      "answer": "Acute illness, inflammation, pregnancy, liver disease, anticoagulants, sample handling, and factor replacement therapy can all affect interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Coagulation Factor Assays | Factor VIII, IX, XI, Fibrinogen, Bleeding Workups, and Inhibitors",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/coagulation-factor-assays.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 435,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a comprehensive metabolic panel measure?",
      "answer": "A CMP measures 14 substances in blood, commonly including glucose, calcium, electrolytes, blood proteins, liver-related enzymes and bilirubin, BUN, and creatinine.",
      "pageTitle": "Comprehensive Metabolic Panel Guide | CMP Blood Test Markers, Fasting, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 436,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do you need to fast for a CMP?",
      "answer": "You may need to fast for several hours before a CMP, especially when glucose interpretation matters or when other fasting tests are drawn at the same visit. Follow the instructions from your clinician or lab.",
      "pageTitle": "Comprehensive Metabolic Panel Guide | CMP Blood Test Markers, Fasting, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 437,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a normal CMP prove kidneys and liver are healthy?",
      "answer": "No. A normal CMP can be reassuring, but kidney and liver questions may still require context, trends, urine testing, imaging, hepatitis tests, medication review, or other follow-up depending on symptoms and risk factors.",
      "pageTitle": "Comprehensive Metabolic Panel Guide | CMP Blood Test Markers, Fasting, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/comprehensive-metabolic-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 438,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can an altitude readiness score tell me if I will get altitude sickness?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says there is no simple screening test that reliably predicts altitude-illness risk, and consumer scores do not replace that clinical reality.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer altitude readiness score claims | what it can and cannot tell you",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 439,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a high oxygen saturation enough to prove I am acclimatized?",
      "answer": "No. Pulse oximetry can be helpful, but a good number alone does not prove acclimatization or guarantee safety during ascent.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer altitude readiness score claims | what it can and cannot tell you",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 440,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does fitness protect me from altitude illness?",
      "answer": "Not reliably. Fitness may help performance, but CDC notes that training and physical fitness do not remove altitude-illness risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer altitude readiness score claims | what it can and cannot tell you",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 441,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should I ignore the score?",
      "answer": "If you have worsening headache, confusion, vomiting, trouble walking, shortness of breath at rest, chest pain, or blue lips, the score should not override urgent symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer altitude readiness score claims | what it can and cannot tell you",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 442,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Are wearables accurate enough for altitude decisions?",
      "answer": "Sometimes they can be useful as trend tools, but FDA cautions that pulse oximeters have limitations and can be inaccurate under certain conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer altitude readiness score claims | what it can and cannot tell you",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 443,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What matters most when planning a high-altitude trip?",
      "answer": "Sleeping altitude, ascent rate, prior altitude response, and the ability to descend or get help if symptoms begin matter more than a single readiness score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer altitude readiness score claims | what it can and cannot tell you",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-altitude-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 444,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do Alzheimer blood biomarker tests measure?",
      "answer": "They usually measure proteins linked to amyloid and tau biology, such as p-tau217 or an amyloid ratio, sometimes alongside broader injury markers.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Alzheimer's blood biomarker test claims | p-tau217, amyloid, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 445,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can I use one as a screening test if I feel normal?",
      "answer": "Not as a routine consumer screen. NIH and FDA sources emphasize symptomatic specialty-care use, not stand-alone screening in people without symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Alzheimer's blood biomarker test claims | p-tau217, amyloid, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 446,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a positive result mean I have Alzheimer's disease?",
      "answer": "No. It can raise suspicion for Alzheimer-related pathology, but the result still needs clinical context and sometimes confirmatory testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Alzheimer's blood biomarker test claims | p-tau217, amyloid, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 447,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule Alzheimer's out?",
      "answer": "Not completely. It may lower the likelihood of amyloid pathology at that time, but it does not replace a full cognitive evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Alzheimer's blood biomarker test claims | p-tau217, amyloid, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 448,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "How do blood tests compare with PET or spinal fluid testing?",
      "answer": "Blood tests can be easier to access, but PET and CSF have been the more established reference methods, especially when diagnosis is uncertain.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Alzheimer's blood biomarker test claims | p-tau217, amyloid, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 449,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before ordering one?",
      "answer": "Ask who the test is for, what marker it measures, what cutoff is used, whether it is FDA-cleared, and what follow-up happens if the result is abnormal.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Alzheimer's blood biomarker test claims | p-tau217, amyloid, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-alzheimers-blood-biomarker-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 450,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a plasma amino acid panel only for babies?",
      "answer": "No. It is especially important in infants, but it can also help in selected metabolic, nutrition, liver, or kidney workups when a clinician has a specific reason to use it.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Amino Acid Panel Claims | Plasma Amino Acids, Nutrition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 451,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can diet or supplements change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Fasting, recent meals, supplements, illness, pregnancy, and sample handling can all shift amino acid levels.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Amino Acid Panel Claims | Plasma Amino Acids, Nutrition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 452,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a wellness amino acid score prove deficiency?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. A real deficiency or metabolic pattern usually needs clinical context and sometimes confirmatory testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Amino Acid Panel Claims | Plasma Amino Acids, Nutrition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 453,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do clinical labs use age-specific reference ranges?",
      "answer": "Normal amino acid patterns vary by age, specimen type, and laboratory method, so the reference interval has to match the test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Amino Acid Panel Claims | Plasma Amino Acids, Nutrition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 454,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up might happen after an abnormal result?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat testing, diet review, metabolic genetics input, or other labs that fit the suspected disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Amino Acid Panel Claims | Plasma Amino Acids, Nutrition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 455,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the safest way to use the panel?",
      "answer": "Use it for a defined medical question, not as a generic supplement-shopping scorecard.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Amino Acid Panel Claims | Plasma Amino Acids, Nutrition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-amino-acid-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 456,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does autonomic age mean my nervous system is that age?",
      "answer": "No. It is usually a proxy score built from wearable signals such as HRV, resting heart rate, activity, sleep, or pulse features.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer autonomic age score claims | HRV, autonomic testing, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 457,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose dysautonomia or autonomic neuropathy?",
      "answer": "No. Those conditions are evaluated with symptoms, exam findings, and autonomic testing, not a consumer age label.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer autonomic age score claims | HRV, autonomic testing, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 458,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why can the score change from day to day?",
      "answer": "Sleep, illness, alcohol, dehydration, medications, overtraining, stress, altitude, and sensor quality can all shift the signals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer autonomic age score claims | HRV, autonomic testing, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 459,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is HRV the same as autonomic age?",
      "answer": "No. HRV is one signal that may feed the score, but the score is usually a broader algorithm and may not be transparent.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer autonomic age score claims | HRV, autonomic testing, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 460,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the score drops suddenly?",
      "answer": "A sudden drop can reflect a real physiologic change or simply measurement noise. If symptoms such as dizziness, fainting, chest pain, or palpitations are present, get medical input.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer autonomic age score claims | HRV, autonomic testing, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 461,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what it was validated against, whether the company shows the inputs, whether the score is cleared for clinical use, and how it handles noisy or missing data.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer autonomic age score claims | HRV, autonomic testing, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-autonomic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 462,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is biological resilience the same as biological age?",
      "answer": "Not exactly. Biological age is usually a comparison to chronological age, while resilience suggests how well the body handles stress, recovery, or change.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Biological Resilience Score Claims | Aging Biomarkers, Recovery, Stress Response, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 463,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a resilience score diagnose disease?",
      "answer": "No. It may be interesting research or wellness data, but it does not diagnose disease or replace standard lab, imaging, or clinician evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Biological Resilience Score Claims | Aging Biomarkers, Recovery, Stress Response, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 464,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What inputs might be used?",
      "answer": "Possible inputs include blood proteins, methylation data, inflammatory markers, wearables, body composition, or proprietary algorithms.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Biological Resilience Score Claims | Aging Biomarkers, Recovery, Stress Response, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 465,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a better score prove my supplement worked?",
      "answer": "No. A score moving up or down does not prove the intervention caused better health outcomes.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Biological Resilience Score Claims | Aging Biomarkers, Recovery, Stress Response, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 466,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make the claim stronger?",
      "answer": "Disclosure of the exact inputs, repeatability data, prospective validation, independent replication, and a clear link to meaningful outcomes.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Biological Resilience Score Claims | Aging Biomarkers, Recovery, Stress Response, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 467,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I use instead for medical decisions?",
      "answer": "Standard markers, symptoms, history, exam findings, and clinician-directed tests are usually more actionable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Biological Resilience Score Claims | Aging Biomarkers, Recovery, Stress Response, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-biological-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 468,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a breathing age score mean my lungs are older than my actual age?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. It is usually a proxy score that blends several measurements and may be influenced by fitness, sleep, illness, altitude, anxiety, or sensor quality.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing age score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 469,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a breathing age score diagnose asthma or COPD?",
      "answer": "No. Diagnosis still depends on symptoms, exam, spirometry or other lung testing, and clinician interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing age score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 470,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What measurements commonly feed the score?",
      "answer": "Products may use respiratory rate, oxygen saturation, heart rate, sleep, activity, or other wearable signals. The exact formula is often not transparent.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing age score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 471,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if the score drops suddenly?",
      "answer": "A sudden change can reflect illness, poor sleep, altitude, alcohol, medication effects, or sensor issues. New breathlessness, chest pain, or low oxygen deserves medical attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing age score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 472,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is CPET the same thing as a breathing age score?",
      "answer": "No. CPET is a clinical exercise test that measures gas exchange, ventilation, and cardiovascular responses. A consumer score may only mimic some of that information.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing age score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 473,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the score?",
      "answer": "Ask what it is validated against, how it handles disease or altitude, whether it is cleared for clinical use, and how it handles missing or noisy sensor data.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing age score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 474,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does breathing capacity score mean I have good lungs?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. It is usually a proxy label and not a direct lung-function measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing capacity score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 475,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose asthma or COPD?",
      "answer": "No. Diagnosis still depends on symptoms, exam, and pulmonary function testing such as spirometry.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing capacity score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 476,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the difference between CPET and a wearable score?",
      "answer": "CPET is a clinical exercise test that directly measures ventilation and gas exchange. A wearable score may only infer a few of those signals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing capacity score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 477,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do these scores change so much?",
      "answer": "Sleep, illness, altitude, anxiety, alcohol, exercise, and sensor fit can all change the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing capacity score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 478,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if I am short of breath but the score looks fine?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. New or worsening shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, or low oxygen should be evaluated.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing capacity score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 479,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what it was validated against, whether it clearly defines capacity, how it handles noisy data, and whether it gives symptom-based safety guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing capacity score claims | spirometry, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 480,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is breathing efficiency the same as respiratory rate?",
      "answer": "No. Respiratory rate is only one signal. Efficiency in CPET depends on how ventilation, oxygen uptake, and carbon dioxide elimination behave together.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Ventilation, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 481,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a wearable estimate VE/VCO2?",
      "answer": "It can estimate something, but VE/VCO2 in CPET is based on measured gas exchange. A proxy is not the same as the lab value.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Ventilation, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 482,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a high score mean my lungs are healthy?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. The score may reflect device inputs, training state, or behavior rather than lung function, and symptoms still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Ventilation, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 483,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can asthma, COPD, or anemia change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Those conditions can affect breathing pattern, oxygen delivery, and exercise tolerance, so a trend score may shift for real reasons that need clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Ventilation, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 484,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does CPET add that consumer devices do not?",
      "answer": "CPET measures the physiology directly and can help distinguish ventilatory, cardiac, mixed, and noncardiopulmonary causes of exercise limitation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Ventilation, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 485,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I trust the app less and seek care instead?",
      "answer": "If the score is paired with shortness of breath at rest, chest pain, fainting, low oxygen, or symptoms that are getting worse, medical evaluation matters more than a consumer trend.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Ventilation, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 486,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Can a breathing efficiency score replace exercise testing?",
      "answer": "No. If symptoms are changing or a clinician needs the physiology directly, exercise stress testing or CPET is the better tool.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Ventilation, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 487,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a breathing readiness score mean my lungs are healthy?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. It is usually a proxy score that blends several wearable signals and does not directly measure lung function.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing readiness score claims | respiratory rate, SpO2, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 488,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose asthma or COPD?",
      "answer": "No. Diagnosis still depends on symptoms, exam findings, spirometry, or other pulmonary function testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing readiness score claims | respiratory rate, SpO2, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 489,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is this the same thing as CPET or spirometry?",
      "answer": "No. CPET is a clinical exercise test that directly measures ventilation and gas exchange, while spirometry measures airflow and lung volumes in a clinical setting.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing readiness score claims | respiratory rate, SpO2, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 490,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do breathing readiness scores change so much?",
      "answer": "Sleep, illness, altitude, alcohol, anxiety, exercise, medication effects, and sensor fit can all shift the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing readiness score claims | respiratory rate, SpO2, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 491,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the score looks good but I feel short of breath?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. New or worsening shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, wheeze, or low oxygen readings need real evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing readiness score claims | respiratory rate, SpO2, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 492,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what it predicts, what clinical test it was validated against, how it handles noisy or missing data, and whether it gives symptom-based safety guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing readiness score claims | respiratory rate, SpO2, CPET, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 493,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a breathing reserve score mean my lungs are healthy?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. It is usually a proxy score and does not directly measure lung function or airflow.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 494,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose asthma or COPD?",
      "answer": "No. Diagnosis still depends on symptoms, exam findings, spirometry, and sometimes other pulmonary testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 495,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is this the same as CPET or spirometry?",
      "answer": "No. CPET is a clinical exercise test that directly measures ventilation and gas exchange, while spirometry measures airflow and lung volumes in a clinical setting.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 496,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do breathing reserve scores change so much?",
      "answer": "Sleep, illness, altitude, exercise, medications, anxiety, and sensor fit can all change the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 497,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the score looks fine but I feel short of breath?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. New or worsening shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, wheeze, or low oxygen readings need evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 498,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what it predicts, what it was validated against, how it handles noisy data, and whether it gives symptom-based safety guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer breathing reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 499,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a breathing strain score usually measure?",
      "answer": "It often mixes respiratory rate, SpO2, heart rate, sleep, motion, or training data into one label. The exact meaning depends on the company.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Strain Score Claims | Respiratory Rate, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 500,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a high strain score the same as low oxygen?",
      "answer": "No. A score can rise for many reasons, and low oxygen is only one possible contributor.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Strain Score Claims | Respiratory Rate, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 501,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a wearable replace spirometry or CPET?",
      "answer": "No. Wearables can be useful for trends, but they do not replace formal lung-function testing or exercise testing when a clinician needs that information.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Strain Score Claims | Respiratory Rate, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 502,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why can the score be wrong?",
      "answer": "Motion, poor fit, cold skin, skin tone differences, altitude, illness, or sensor noise can all affect wearable readings.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Strain Score Claims | Respiratory Rate, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 503,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if I feel short of breath but the score looks fine?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Worsening breathlessness, chest pain, fainting, blue lips, or confusion should not be ignored.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Strain Score Claims | Respiratory Rate, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 504,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should be cautious with these scores?",
      "answer": "People with asthma, COPD, sleep apnea, anemia, heart disease, or altitude exposure should treat the number as a trend, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Strain Score Claims | Respiratory Rate, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 505,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Can a breathing strain score replace exercise testing?",
      "answer": "No. If symptoms are changing or a clinician needs the physiology directly, exercise stress testing or CPET is the better tool.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathing Strain Score Claims | Respiratory Rate, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathing-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 506,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a breathwork score mean I am calm?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. The score may reflect a breathing pattern, HRV, or session completion, but calm is a personal and clinical context question, not just one device number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathwork Score Claims | HRV Biofeedback, Respiratory Rate, Stress, Coherence, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 507,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is HRV the same as a stress score?",
      "answer": "No. HRV is one signal that can move with breathing and recovery. A stress score is usually a proprietary combination of signals, not a direct HRV reading.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathwork Score Claims | HRV Biofeedback, Respiratory Rate, Stress, Coherence, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 508,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can slower breathing always help?",
      "answer": "No. Slow breathing can be useful, but it is not right for every person or every situation. Dizziness, panic, chest pain, fainting, or severe shortness of breath should stop the session.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathwork Score Claims | HRV Biofeedback, Respiratory Rate, Stress, Coherence, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 509,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does the score vary so much?",
      "answer": "Breathing pace, device fit, movement, posture, anxiety, asthma, altitude, and the app's algorithm can all move the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathwork Score Claims | HRV Biofeedback, Respiratory Rate, Stress, Coherence, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 510,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can it diagnose anxiety or vagal tone problems?",
      "answer": "No. Breathwork scores are not diagnostic tests for anxiety, dysautonomia, or vagal-tone problems.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathwork Score Claims | HRV Biofeedback, Respiratory Rate, Stress, Coherence, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 511,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score was validated against, whether it uses ECG or only phone sensors, whether it shows raw breathing data, and whether it explains when symptoms should override the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Breathwork Score Claims | HRV Biofeedback, Respiratory Rate, Stress, Coherence, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-breathwork-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 512,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a CYP1A2 result tell me how much caffeine is safe?",
      "answer": "No. It may suggest a slower or faster metabolism tendency, but safety still depends on symptoms, total dose, pregnancy, blood pressure, sleep, and medicines.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Caffeine Metabolism Score Claims | CYP1A2, ADORA2A, Sleep, Anxiety, Blood Pressure, and Genetic Testing Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 513,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a caffeine score separate metabolism from sensitivity?",
      "answer": "It should try to, but those are not the same thing. Someone can clear caffeine at a typical rate and still feel jittery, anxious, or sleepless.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Caffeine Metabolism Score Claims | CYP1A2, ADORA2A, Sleep, Anxiety, Blood Pressure, and Genetic Testing Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 514,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What else changes caffeine response?",
      "answer": "Sleep debt, smoking, liver disease, pregnancy, oral contraceptives, anxiety, stimulant medicines, and the time of day can all change the response.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Caffeine Metabolism Score Claims | CYP1A2, ADORA2A, Sleep, Anxiety, Blood Pressure, and Genetic Testing Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 515,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should I use the score to time caffeine for sleep?",
      "answer": "It can be a nudge, not a rule. If caffeine is still affecting sleep, the more useful fix is usually dose reduction or earlier timing rather than chasing a better score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Caffeine Metabolism Score Claims | CYP1A2, ADORA2A, Sleep, Anxiety, Blood Pressure, and Genetic Testing Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 516,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can caffeine scores explain blood pressure or palpitations?",
      "answer": "Not by themselves. A score does not diagnose hypertension or a rhythm problem; symptoms and blood pressure readings matter more.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Caffeine Metabolism Score Claims | CYP1A2, ADORA2A, Sleep, Anxiety, Blood Pressure, and Genetic Testing Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 517,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should I change medicines or supplements because of the score?",
      "answer": "Not without a clinician. Some medicines and supplements interact with caffeine, so a score should never replace medication review.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Caffeine Metabolism Score Claims | CYP1A2, ADORA2A, Sleep, Anxiety, Blood Pressure, and Genetic Testing Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-caffeine-metabolism-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 518,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is an MCED or MCD test?",
      "answer": "NCI uses MCD for multi-cancer detection, while many companies say MCED for multi-cancer early detection. These are blood-based assays that try to detect biological signals that can suggest cancer, but they are still prediction tools rather than a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer cancer methylation blood test claims | MCED screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 519,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive result mean I have cancer?",
      "answer": "No. A positive result means the test detected a signal that needs follow-up. Imaging, tissue sampling, or other evaluation may still find no cancer, and the next step depends on the test and the clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer cancer methylation blood test claims | MCED screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 520,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can this replace guideline-backed cancer screening?",
      "answer": "No. NCI guidance says established screening tests still matter, including mammography, colorectal screening, cervical screening, and lung screening when someone is eligible.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer cancer methylation blood test claims | MCED screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 521,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why can a positive test still end up with no cancer found?",
      "answer": "The test may be sensitive to a signal that is not specific enough to identify cancer confidently, or the cancer may be too small or in a location that is hard to find. NCI notes that in published research, more than half of positive MCD tests did not lead to a cancer being found.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer cancer methylation blood test claims | MCED screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 522,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Are consumer methylation tests FDA-cleared for screening?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. FDA review depends on the exact test, the intended use, and the risk category. Consumers should check whether the specific product is FDA-cleared or approved for the claimed use, or whether it is being offered as an LDT or research-oriented test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer cancer methylation blood test claims | MCED screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 523,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before paying for one?",
      "answer": "Ask what cancers it was validated for, whether it is intended for screening or another use, what happens after a positive result, and which standard screenings still apply. If the answer is vague, the claim is probably ahead of the evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer cancer methylation blood test claims | MCED screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cancer-methylation-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 524,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a circadian rhythm score tell me my chronotype?",
      "answer": "Not reliably. A score may hint at whether your schedule is early, late, or inconsistent, but chronotype is broader than one wearable number and is better judged from patterns, symptoms, and sometimes sleep specialist review.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Circadian Rhythm Score Claims | Sleep Timing, Light Exposure, Chronotype, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 525,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is this the same as actigraphy or a sleep study?",
      "answer": "No. Consumer scores may borrow ideas from actigraphy or sleep logs, but a clinical sleep study or formal actigraphy review is a different tool with a different purpose.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Circadian Rhythm Score Claims | Sleep Timing, Light Exposure, Chronotype, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 526,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do circadian scores swing so much with travel or shift work?",
      "answer": "Time-zone changes, shift schedules, late light exposure, irregular meals, and sleep timing changes can all shift the patterns the score uses.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Circadian Rhythm Score Claims | Sleep Timing, Light Exposure, Chronotype, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 527,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a circadian score diagnose insomnia or sleep apnea?",
      "answer": "No. Persistent insomnia, snoring, gasping, excessive sleepiness, or shift-work problems need clinical evaluation regardless of the score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Circadian Rhythm Score Claims | Sleep Timing, Light Exposure, Chronotype, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 528,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the score looks good but I still feel tired?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Fatigue can come from sleep loss, medications, depression, anemia, sleep apnea, thyroid problems, or other issues even when the wearable looks stable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Circadian Rhythm Score Claims | Sleep Timing, Light Exposure, Chronotype, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 529,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score is validated against, whether it uses sleep logs, actigraphy, light exposure, or temperature rhythm, and whether it clearly says it is not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Circadian Rhythm Score Claims | Sleep Timing, Light Exposure, Chronotype, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-circadian-rhythm-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 530,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a CO2 tolerance score the same as end-tidal CO2?",
      "answer": "No. End-tidal CO2 is a clinical measurement from exhaled gas. A consumer tolerance score is usually an inferred trend unless the device proves otherwise.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer CO2 Tolerance Score Claims | Breath Holds, Capnography, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 531,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can breath-hold time show my actual CO2 level?",
      "answer": "Not reliably. Breath-hold time can be affected by training, coaching, anxiety, and safety behavior rather than blood or exhaled CO2 alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer CO2 Tolerance Score Claims | Breath Holds, Capnography, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 532,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a higher score mean better lung health?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. The score may reflect the app’s algorithm, not a diagnosis or direct measure of lung function.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer CO2 Tolerance Score Claims | Breath Holds, Capnography, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 533,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does capnography matter here?",
      "answer": "Capnography is the clinical way to measure exhaled CO2 in many settings, so it shows the kind of evidence a consumer score would need to compete with.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer CO2 Tolerance Score Claims | Breath Holds, Capnography, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 534,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can breathing apps be useful anyway?",
      "answer": "Yes, for coaching or habit change. The key is not to mistake a coaching tool for a medical CO2 test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer CO2 Tolerance Score Claims | Breath Holds, Capnography, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 535,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should symptoms override the score?",
      "answer": "If there is shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, low oxygen, or worsening exercise intolerance, clinical care matters more than the app score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer CO2 Tolerance Score Claims | Breath Holds, Capnography, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-co2-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 536,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a cognitive readiness score measure my brain function?",
      "answer": "Not directly. It is usually a proxy for how ready you may feel based on sleep, recovery, reaction time, and related signals, not a clinical test of memory or intelligence.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cognitive Readiness Score Claims | Sleep, Reaction Time, Focus, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 537,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose ADHD, dementia, or concussion?",
      "answer": "No. Those conditions need history, exam, and sometimes formal testing. A wearable score alone cannot diagnose them.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cognitive Readiness Score Claims | Sleep, Reaction Time, Focus, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 538,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the score change after poor sleep or alcohol?",
      "answer": "Sleep loss, alcohol, stress, and illness can all affect reaction time, HRV, resting heart rate, and how alert you feel, so the score may drop for several different reasons.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cognitive Readiness Score Claims | Sleep, Reaction Time, Focus, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 539,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is reaction-time testing enough to prove readiness?",
      "answer": "No. Reaction-time tasks can be useful, but practice effects, device setup, and motivation can change the result. They are one clue, not the whole picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cognitive Readiness Score Claims | Sleep, Reaction Time, Focus, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 540,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the score looks good but I feel foggy?",
      "answer": "Trust the symptoms and the task at hand. Fatigue, confusion, headache, mood changes, or memory trouble deserve attention even when the score looks fine.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cognitive Readiness Score Claims | Sleep, Reaction Time, Focus, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 541,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score was validated against, whether it shows the underlying signals, and whether it tells users when symptoms should override the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cognitive Readiness Score Claims | Sleep, Reaction Time, Focus, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cognitive-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 542,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a cortisol stress score diagnose adrenal fatigue?",
      "answer": "No. Adrenal fatigue is not a recognized diagnosis, and a wellness score cannot establish it.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cortisol Stress Score Claims | Saliva, Blood, Urine, Adrenal Fatigue, and Rhythm Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 543,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one bad night change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Sleep loss, travel, pain, alcohol, and stress can all change cortisol-related signals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cortisol Stress Score Claims | Saliva, Blood, Urine, Adrenal Fatigue, and Rhythm Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 544,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is saliva always better than blood for cortisol?",
      "answer": "No. The right test depends on the question, the timing, and whether a clinician is evaluating a known condition.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cortisol Stress Score Claims | Saliva, Blood, Urine, Adrenal Fatigue, and Rhythm Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 545,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should I trust the score if I feel unwell?",
      "answer": "No. Symptoms such as severe fatigue, weight change, blood pressure problems, bruising, or weakness matter more than the dashboard.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cortisol Stress Score Claims | Saliva, Blood, Urine, Adrenal Fatigue, and Rhythm Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 546,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make the claim stronger?",
      "answer": "It should show validation against clinical outcomes, the exact sample type, and how it separates wellness use from diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cortisol Stress Score Claims | Saliva, Blood, Urine, Adrenal Fatigue, and Rhythm Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 547,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask what test it uses, what time of day it measures, and whether a clinician-ordered endocrine workup is still needed if symptoms persist.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Cortisol Stress Score Claims | Saliva, Blood, Urine, Adrenal Fatigue, and Rhythm Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-cortisol-stress-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 548,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a dehydration risk score diagnose dehydration?",
      "answer": "No. It may be a reminder or trend tool, but symptoms, heat exposure, fluid intake, urine output, and sometimes blood or urine testing matter more.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Dehydration Risk Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Symptoms, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 549,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does the score usually use as input?",
      "answer": "Wearables and apps may use heart rate, skin temperature, sweat estimates, weather, activity, urine logs, or electrolyte assumptions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Dehydration Risk Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Symptoms, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 550,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the biggest problem with these scores?",
      "answer": "They can sound more precise than they are. Many scores are built from estimates, not direct measurement of body fluid balance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Dehydration Risk Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Symptoms, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 551,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is a score more useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful as a trend tool for exercise, heat exposure, or repeatable training conditions, especially when paired with body weight and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Dehydration Risk Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Symptoms, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 552,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What symptoms should override the app?",
      "answer": "Confusion, fainting, severe weakness, chest pain, vomiting, very little urination, or a hot environment with worsening symptoms should override the score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Dehydration Risk Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Symptoms, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 553,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can I trust the score if I have kidney disease or take diuretics?",
      "answer": "Be cautious. Kidney disease, heart disease, diabetes, pregnancy, and medicines that change urination or sweating can make the score less reliable and make hydration advice riskier.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Dehydration Risk Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Symptoms, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-dehydration-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 554,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a consumer exertion tolerance score measure?",
      "answer": "It usually combines workout data with heart rate, recovery, sleep, or VO2 estimates to suggest how well your body tolerated recent effort.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exertion Tolerance Score Claims | VO2 Max, Heart Rate, Recovery, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 555,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a low score the same as a medical problem?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. A low score can reflect fatigue, poor sleep, heat, dehydration, illness, or sensor noise as well as a medical issue.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exertion Tolerance Score Claims | VO2 Max, Heart Rate, Recovery, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 556,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a wearable replace a stress test or CPET?",
      "answer": "No. Wearables can be useful for trends, but they do not replace formal exercise testing when a clinician needs that information.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exertion Tolerance Score Claims | VO2 Max, Heart Rate, Recovery, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 557,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why can the score be wrong?",
      "answer": "Algorithm assumptions, device fit, skin tone, motion, and the type of workout can all affect wearable estimates.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exertion Tolerance Score Claims | VO2 Max, Heart Rate, Recovery, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 558,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if I feel short of breath but the score looks fine?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Chest pain, fainting, severe breathlessness, or blue lips should not be ignored.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exertion Tolerance Score Claims | VO2 Max, Heart Rate, Recovery, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 559,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should be cautious with these scores?",
      "answer": "People with known heart or lung disease, anemia, post-viral symptoms, or a major change in exercise tolerance should treat the score as a trend, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exertion Tolerance Score Claims | VO2 Max, Heart Rate, Recovery, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exertion-tolerance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 560,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is exosome testing the same as a liquid biopsy?",
      "answer": "Not exactly. Exosomes are one possible component of a liquid biopsy strategy, but not every liquid biopsy is an exosome test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exosome Biomarker Testing Claims | Liquid Biopsy, Cancer Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 561,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can exosome tests screen for cancer today?",
      "answer": "Not broadly in routine care. Research is promising, but screening claims need evidence for the exact test, population, and follow-up pathway.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exosome Biomarker Testing Claims | Liquid Biopsy, Cancer Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 562,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does FDA caution matter?",
      "answer": "Because unapproved products can be marketed with claims that are stronger than the evidence for the exact product and use.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exosome Biomarker Testing Claims | Liquid Biopsy, Cancer Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 563,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does the exact isolation method matter?",
      "answer": "Different methods can produce different vesicle populations and different results, which makes broad claims hard to compare.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exosome Biomarker Testing Claims | Liquid Biopsy, Cancer Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 564,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should happen after a positive result?",
      "answer": "A positive result should connect to a validated diagnostic pathway, not just more proprietary testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exosome Biomarker Testing Claims | Liquid Biopsy, Cancer Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 565,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When are exosome biomarkers useful today?",
      "answer": "They are most useful in research and in carefully validated clinical settings tied to a specific disease and action.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Exosome Biomarker Testing Claims | Liquid Biopsy, Cancer Screening, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-exosome-biomarker-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 566,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a focus score diagnose ADHD?",
      "answer": "No. ADHD is a clinical diagnosis, and a focus score cannot confirm it or rule it out.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Focus Score Claims | Attention Apps, Sleep, HRV, Reaction Time, Caffeine, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 567,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can sleep deprivation make the score look bad?",
      "answer": "Yes. Short sleep or poor sleep quality can lower concentration, slow reaction time, and make the score look worse.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Focus Score Claims | Attention Apps, Sleep, HRV, Reaction Time, Caffeine, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 568,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What else can change focus besides sleep?",
      "answer": "Stress, caffeine timing, alcohol, medications, depression, anxiety, pain, and illness can all affect attention and performance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Focus Score Claims | Attention Apps, Sleep, HRV, Reaction Time, Caffeine, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 569,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should I trust a score if I feel fine?",
      "answer": "Only as a trend. If the number conflicts with how you feel, the score may be incomplete or noisy.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Focus Score Claims | Attention Apps, Sleep, HRV, Reaction Time, Caffeine, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 570,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can I use the score for school or work decisions?",
      "answer": "Not safely. Consumer scores are not validated for hiring, testing accommodations, or performance decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Focus Score Claims | Attention Apps, Sleep, HRV, Reaction Time, Caffeine, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 571,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get medical care?",
      "answer": "New or sudden confusion, severe headache, fainting, weakness, memory change, or other neurologic symptoms should prompt medical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Focus Score Claims | Attention Apps, Sleep, HRV, Reaction Time, Caffeine, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-focus-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 572,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a frailty score diagnose frailty?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. A score can support a conversation, but frailty is usually judged with functional assessment, history, and sometimes clinical tools.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Frailty Score Claims | Grip Strength, Gait Speed, Function, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 573,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is frailty the same as being old?",
      "answer": "No. Frailty is about vulnerability and function, not just age.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Frailty Score Claims | Grip Strength, Gait Speed, Function, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 574,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can wearables tell me if I am frail?",
      "answer": "Wearables can contribute activity or sleep data, but they cannot replace direct function testing such as gait speed or grip strength.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Frailty Score Claims | Grip Strength, Gait Speed, Function, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 575,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What makes a frailty score more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "It should be validated against outcomes like falls, hospitalization, disability, surgery risk, or loss of independence, not just against another app score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Frailty Score Claims | Grip Strength, Gait Speed, Function, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 576,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if the score is high but I feel fine?",
      "answer": "Look at function, symptoms, recent illness, medication changes, weight loss, weakness, and balance. The score alone should not overrule how you feel and move.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Frailty Score Claims | Grip Strength, Gait Speed, Function, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 577,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the score uses direct functional measures, what population it was validated in, and what practical next step it recommends when the score is abnormal.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Frailty Score Claims | Grip Strength, Gait Speed, Function, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-frailty-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 578,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is an AGE score the same as A1C?",
      "answer": "No. A1C is a validated blood test for glucose exposure over time, while AGE scores are exploratory markers with a different evidence base.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Glycation and AGE Testing Claims | Skin Autofluorescence, A1C, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 579,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can AGE testing diagnose diabetes?",
      "answer": "No. Diabetes diagnosis still relies on validated glucose-based testing and clinical criteria.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Glycation and AGE Testing Claims | Skin Autofluorescence, A1C, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 580,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What affects the reading?",
      "answer": "Skin tone, age, kidney disease, smoking, sun exposure, hydration, and device method can all affect interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Glycation and AGE Testing Claims | Skin Autofluorescence, A1C, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 581,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do supplements proving lower AGE scores prove benefit?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. A lower score does not automatically mean better outcomes unless the exact test and intervention are validated.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Glycation and AGE Testing Claims | Skin Autofluorescence, A1C, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 582,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should be ordered first if glycation risk matters?",
      "answer": "Validated diabetes and cardiometabolic tests such as A1C, fasting glucose, blood pressure, lipids, and kidney checks usually come first.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Glycation and AGE Testing Claims | Skin Autofluorescence, A1C, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 583,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When might AGE testing be useful?",
      "answer": "It may be useful in research or as an exploratory add-on when a clinician understands the method and its limits.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Glycation and AGE Testing Claims | Skin Autofluorescence, A1C, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 584,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if the AGE score conflicts with A1C or symptoms?",
      "answer": "Validated glucose-based testing and the clinical picture should take priority, because AGE scores are not established replacements for diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Glycation and AGE Testing Claims | Skin Autofluorescence, A1C, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-glycation-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 585,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a healthspan score measure how long I will live?",
      "answer": "Not directly. A score may summarize markers related to aging, but it does not prove lifespan or healthspan by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Healthspan Score Claims | Biomarkers, Biological Age, Fitness, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 586,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is biological age the same as healthspan?",
      "answer": "No. Biological age is an estimate of how one or more biomarkers resemble an aging pattern. Healthspan is about years lived in good function and health.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Healthspan Score Claims | Biomarkers, Biological Age, Fitness, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 587,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a supplement lower my score and prove it works?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. A score can move because of noise, timing, or unrelated changes. You would want repeatability and real outcomes, not just a better number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Healthspan Score Claims | Biomarkers, Biological Age, Fitness, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 588,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What makes a score more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "Clear inputs, a defined reference population, repeatability, transparent validation, and evidence that changes in the score matter clinically.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Healthspan Score Claims | Biomarkers, Biological Age, Fitness, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 589,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I ignore standard risk markers if the score looks good?",
      "answer": "No. Blood pressure, A1C, lipids, kidney function, fitness, smoking history, and symptoms still matter even if a proprietary score looks favorable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Healthspan Score Claims | Biomarkers, Biological Age, Fitness, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 590,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score is based on, whether it was validated prospectively, and whether it improves decisions beyond standard clinical markers.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Healthspan Score Claims | Biomarkers, Biological Age, Fitness, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-healthspan-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 591,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a heat strain score tell me if I am safe to keep working or exercising?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. A score can be a warning signal, but symptoms, environment, workload, acclimatization, and access to cooling matter more.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heat Strain Score Claims | wearables, heat stress, heart rate, temperature, hydration, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 592,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can the score diagnose heat exhaustion or heat stroke?",
      "answer": "No. Heat illness is a clinical safety problem. Confusion, fainting, hot skin, severe weakness, vomiting, or stopped sweating require immediate action.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heat Strain Score Claims | wearables, heat stress, heart rate, temperature, hydration, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 593,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do different wearables give different heat strain scores?",
      "answer": "Devices may use different sensors, weather inputs, heart-rate models, skin temperature estimates, and algorithm thresholds.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heat Strain Score Claims | wearables, heat stress, heart rate, temperature, hydration, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 594,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does hydration alone fix heat strain?",
      "answer": "Not always. Hydration helps, but acclimatization, rest, shade, cooling, workload, and electrolytes may also matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heat Strain Score Claims | wearables, heat stress, heart rate, temperature, hydration, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 595,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a cooler-looking score mean my body temperature is normal?",
      "answer": "No. Wearable estimates are not the same as a core temperature measurement, so symptoms and clinical judgment still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heat Strain Score Claims | wearables, heat stress, heart rate, temperature, hydration, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 596,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what sensors feed the score, whether it was tested in real heat exposure, and whether it tells users when to stop and seek help regardless of the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heat Strain Score Claims | wearables, heat stress, heart rate, temperature, hydration, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heat-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 597,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a heavy metal panel the same as a detox screen?",
      "answer": "No. It should be used to document a real exposure concern, not to market a detox program.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heavy Metal Panel Claims | Lead, Mercury, Arsenic, Blood, Urine",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 598,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do blood and urine tests differ?",
      "answer": "Different metals and exposure windows are best measured in different specimens.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heavy Metal Panel Claims | Lead, Mercury, Arsenic, Blood, Urine",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 599,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a detectable metal always mean disease?",
      "answer": "No. Interpretation depends on the metal, the level, the exposure source, and symptoms or public-health guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heavy Metal Panel Claims | Lead, Mercury, Arsenic, Blood, Urine",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 600,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is the biggest risk of broad panels?",
      "answer": "They can find a number without showing whether it is clinically meaningful or what action should follow.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heavy Metal Panel Claims | Lead, Mercury, Arsenic, Blood, Urine",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 601,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is lead follow-up different?",
      "answer": "Lead testing often has clearer public-health thresholds and follow-up pathways than many other metals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heavy Metal Panel Claims | Lead, Mercury, Arsenic, Blood, Urine",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 602,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the safest use of a panel?",
      "answer": "Use it to confirm a plausible exposure and to guide source reduction, not to start treatment on speculation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Heavy Metal Panel Claims | Lead, Mercury, Arsenic, Blood, Urine",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-heavy-metal-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 603,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a hydration readiness score measure my blood volume?",
      "answer": "No. It is usually a proxy built from wearables, logs, or algorithms. It does not directly measure blood volume or electrolyte balance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Hydration Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Dehydration, Sodium, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 604,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can the score replace checking symptoms?",
      "answer": "No. Thirst, dark urine, dizziness, confusion, fainting, or inability to keep fluids down matter more than a score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Hydration Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Dehydration, Sodium, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 605,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do sweat and urine metrics tell the whole story?",
      "answer": "No. They are useful clues, but medications, kidney disease, fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and heat exposure can change the interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Hydration Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Dehydration, Sodium, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 606,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can too much water be a problem?",
      "answer": "Yes. Overdrinking can be dangerous, especially during long exercise or when sodium is low. The score should not push unlimited water intake.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Hydration Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Dehydration, Sodium, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 607,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I get medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care promptly for confusion, fainting, chest pain, severe weakness, very little urination, or heat illness symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Hydration Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Dehydration, Sodium, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 608,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is this more useful for athletes or everyday use?",
      "answer": "It tends to be more useful as a trend tool for exercise or heat exposure than as a daily diagnosis of hydration status.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Hydration Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Sweat, Urine, Electrolytes, Dehydration, Sodium, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-hydration-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 609,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a consumer illness risk score measure?",
      "answer": "It usually mixes wearable signals such as temperature, heart rate, HRV, respiratory rate, sleep, and activity to estimate whether your pattern looks different from baseline.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Illness Risk Score Claims | Temperature, HRV, Respiratory Rate, Sleep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 610,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a high score mean I have an infection?",
      "answer": "No. It can be a prompt to pay attention, but fever, symptoms, and proper tests are what establish whether an infection is actually present.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Illness Risk Score Claims | Temperature, HRV, Respiratory Rate, Sleep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 611,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can exercise, stress, or travel raise the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Those factors can change heart rate, HRV, sleep, temperature, and respiratory rate without any infection being present.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Illness Risk Score Claims | Temperature, HRV, Respiratory Rate, Sleep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 612,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should I test for flu or COVID if the score changes?",
      "answer": "That depends on symptoms, exposure, and current public-health guidance. A wearable score alone is not enough to decide.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Illness Risk Score Claims | Temperature, HRV, Respiratory Rate, Sleep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 613,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do companies talk about validation?",
      "answer": "Because a score only matters if it was compared with a real reference, such as lab-confirmed illness or a clearly defined clinical outcome.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Illness Risk Score Claims | Temperature, HRV, Respiratory Rate, Sleep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 614,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should be extra cautious?",
      "answer": "Anyone with fever, shortness of breath, chest pain, dehydration, immune suppression, pregnancy, or a condition that makes infections more risky should rely on symptoms and medical advice, not on the score alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Illness Risk Score Claims | Temperature, HRV, Respiratory Rate, Sleep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-illness-risk-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 615,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does immune age measure immune function?",
      "answer": "Not directly. It is usually a research-style summary, not a clinical immune-function test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Immune Age Score Claims | Inflammaging, Blood Proteins, Immune Cells, Aging, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 616,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can recent illness change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Inflammation, infection, vaccines, exercise, and medications can all shift immune-related markers.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Immune Age Score Claims | Inflammaging, Blood Proteins, Immune Cells, Aging, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 617,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is this the same as a CBC or CRP?",
      "answer": "No. CBC and CRP are standard clinical tests that may be more useful for real medical questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Immune Age Score Claims | Inflammaging, Blood Proteins, Immune Cells, Aging, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 618,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can immune age predict vaccine response?",
      "answer": "Not reliably for an individual. That would need stronger validation than most consumer scores have.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Immune Age Score Claims | Inflammaging, Blood Proteins, Immune Cells, Aging, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 619,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make it more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "It should show what markers it uses, what outcomes it predicts, and whether it adds value beyond CBC, CRP, and clinical history.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Immune Age Score Claims | Inflammaging, Blood Proteins, Immune Cells, Aging, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 620,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the report is research or clinical, whether it separates acute illness from aging, and what real decision changes if the score is abnormal.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Immune Age Score Claims | Inflammaging, Blood Proteins, Immune Cells, Aging, and Validation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-immune-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 621,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a high inflammation score specific?",
      "answer": "No. It is a nonspecific signal that can come from many different causes.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Inflammation Score Tests | CRP, ESR, Cytokines, Wellness Panels, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 622,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Should I use the score to choose supplements?",
      "answer": "Not without a clear clinical reason. Supplements can distract from the actual cause of inflammation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Inflammation Score Tests | CRP, ESR, Cytokines, Wellness Panels, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 623,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can exercise raise CRP or ESR?",
      "answer": "Yes, recent hard exercise can affect inflammatory markers and complicate interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Inflammation Score Tests | CRP, ESR, Cytokines, Wellness Panels, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 624,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a normal score rule out disease?",
      "answer": "No. Many diseases can still be present with a normal inflammatory marker.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Inflammation Score Tests | CRP, ESR, Cytokines, Wellness Panels, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 625,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is cytokine testing ready for consumer decisions?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Many cytokine panels are still hard to interpret outside research or specialist settings.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Inflammation Score Tests | CRP, ESR, Cytokines, Wellness Panels, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 626,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do with a high result?",
      "answer": "Use it as a reason to look for a cause, not as a diagnosis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Inflammation Score Tests | CRP, ESR, Cytokines, Wellness Panels, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 627,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if symptoms are the real problem?",
      "answer": "Then the symptom-based evaluation should take priority, because the score is nonspecific.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Inflammation Score Tests | CRP, ESR, Cytokines, Wellness Panels, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-inflammation-score-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 628,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is HOMA-IR?",
      "answer": "HOMA-IR is a calculation based on fasting glucose and fasting insulin. It is widely used in research and sometimes in commercial reports, but cutoffs are not universal.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer insulin resistance score claims | HOMA-IR, LP-IR, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 629,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is LP-IR?",
      "answer": "LP-IR is a lipoprotein-based score that uses particle size and number patterns. It can signal metabolic risk, but it does not diagnose prediabetes or diabetes.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer insulin resistance score claims | HOMA-IR, LP-IR, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 630,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can an insulin resistance score diagnose prediabetes?",
      "answer": "No. Current clinical diagnosis still relies on A1C, fasting plasma glucose, or a 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer insulin resistance score claims | HOMA-IR, LP-IR, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 631,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do scores and glucose tests not always match?",
      "answer": "Some scores reflect insulin signaling or lipoprotein patterns before glucose rises, so they may disagree with A1C or fasting glucose in early or mixed cases.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer insulin resistance score claims | HOMA-IR, LP-IR, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 632,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if the score is high but my A1C is normal?",
      "answer": "Use the score as a prompt to review weight, waist, lipids, blood pressure, sleep, family history, and whether a clinician thinks a formal glucose test is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer insulin resistance score claims | HOMA-IR, LP-IR, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 633,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Are the cutoffs the same on every report?",
      "answer": "No. Commercial thresholds vary by lab, method, and population, which is one reason these scores need careful interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer insulin resistance score claims | HOMA-IR, LP-IR, and screening limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-insulin-resistance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 634,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a jet lag score tell me my exact circadian phase?",
      "answer": "No. It usually estimates disruption or travel strain, not your exact melatonin timing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Jet Lag Score Claims | Wearables, Circadian Timing, Sleep Debt, Light Exposure, and Travel Recovery",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 635,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose a sleep disorder?",
      "answer": "No. Ongoing insomnia, excessive sleepiness, or shift-work problems need clinical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Jet Lag Score Claims | Wearables, Circadian Timing, Sleep Debt, Light Exposure, and Travel Recovery",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 636,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the score change so much during travel?",
      "answer": "Time zones, sleep loss, light exposure, meals, activity, and travel stress can all move it.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Jet Lag Score Claims | Wearables, Circadian Timing, Sleep Debt, Light Exposure, and Travel Recovery",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 637,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should I trust the score more than how I feel?",
      "answer": "No. Symptoms and practical functioning are more important than the app number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Jet Lag Score Claims | Wearables, Circadian Timing, Sleep Debt, Light Exposure, and Travel Recovery",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 638,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make it more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "It should be validated against actigraphy, sleep logs, melatonin timing, or clinical sleep measures, and it should separate jet lag from simple sleep deprivation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Jet Lag Score Claims | Wearables, Circadian Timing, Sleep Debt, Light Exposure, and Travel Recovery",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 639,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask how it handles eastbound versus westbound travel, what data it uses, and what it tells users to do if the score conflicts with symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Jet Lag Score Claims | Wearables, Circadian Timing, Sleep Debt, Light Exposure, and Travel Recovery",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-jet-lag-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 640,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does lipidomics replace a standard lipid panel?",
      "answer": "No. The standard lipid panel still anchors most cholesterol decisions, and lipidomics should prove that it adds useful information before it changes care.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Lipidomics Testing Claims | Blood Lipids, Risk Scores, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 641,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a lipidomics score diagnose cardiovascular disease?",
      "answer": "No. It may be a research or specialty signal, but diagnosis and risk management still depend on symptoms, history, blood pressure, diabetes status, smoking, and standard lipid markers.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Lipidomics Testing Claims | Blood Lipids, Risk Scores, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 642,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does ApoB matter here?",
      "answer": "ApoB is a practical particle-count marker that already has clinical use in some settings, so a consumer lipidomics score should be compared against it, not just marketed as more advanced.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Lipidomics Testing Claims | Blood Lipids, Risk Scores, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 643,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can fasting or recent illness change the report?",
      "answer": "Yes. Fasting state, medications, alcohol, exercise, and recent illness can all shift lipid-related measurements and complicate interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Lipidomics Testing Claims | Blood Lipids, Risk Scores, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 644,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make the claim stronger?",
      "answer": "It should show reproducibility, lab-to-lab consistency, and evidence that decisions based on the score improve outcomes beyond the standard lipid workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Lipidomics Testing Claims | Blood Lipids, Risk Scores, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 645,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score was compared against, what clinical action it is supposed to change, and whether an ApoB or Lp(a) discussion would be more useful.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Lipidomics Testing Claims | Blood Lipids, Risk Scores, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-lipidomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 646,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a load management score measure?",
      "answer": "It usually blends training load with recovery signals to suggest whether training stress is building or easing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Load Management Score Claims | Training Load, Recovery, Wearables, Injury Risk, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 647,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a high load score automatically bad?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. High load can be appropriate when you are adapting well and not having pain or warning symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Load Management Score Claims | Training Load, Recovery, Wearables, Injury Risk, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 648,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does the score prove injury risk?",
      "answer": "No. It may summarize workload trends, but injury risk depends on many other factors, including prior injury, pain, sleep, fueling, and sport context.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Load Management Score Claims | Training Load, Recovery, Wearables, Injury Risk, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 649,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can recovery metrics be wrong?",
      "answer": "Yes. HRV, sleep, and heart rate are useful trend tools, but they can shift for reasons that have nothing to do with injury or overtraining.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Load Management Score Claims | Training Load, Recovery, Wearables, Injury Risk, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 650,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I follow the score if I feel sick?",
      "answer": "No. Fever, infection, chest symptoms, dizziness, or marked fatigue should outrank the score and may warrant rest or medical care.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Load Management Score Claims | Training Load, Recovery, Wearables, Injury Risk, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 651,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should be extra cautious?",
      "answer": "People with recent injury, recurrent pain, eating problems, sleep deprivation, immune suppression, heart symptoms, or a clinician-directed training restriction should be careful about treating the score like a green light.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Load Management Score Claims | Training Load, Recovery, Wearables, Injury Risk, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-load-management-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 652,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a longevity supplement panel prove I need supplements?",
      "answer": "No. A panel can show markers, but it does not prove that supplementing will improve health or that the panel’s recommendations are necessary.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Longevity Supplement Panel Claims | NAD, Methylation, Inflammation, Nutrients, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 653,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one panel justify a large supplement stack?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Supplement decisions should be tied to a deficiency, a symptom pattern, a medication issue, or a clear evidence-based goal.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Longevity Supplement Panel Claims | NAD, Methylation, Inflammation, Nutrients, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 654,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does conflict of interest matter?",
      "answer": "If the same company sells the test and the supplements, the bar for transparency and independent validation should be higher.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Longevity Supplement Panel Claims | NAD, Methylation, Inflammation, Nutrients, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 655,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can these panels measure aging directly?",
      "answer": "No. They may include aging-related markers, but that is not the same as measuring lifespan or biological age in a clinically settled way.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Longevity Supplement Panel Claims | NAD, Methylation, Inflammation, Nutrients, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 656,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make the claim stronger?",
      "answer": "It should show which markers drive the recommendation, whether the recommendation was tested in outcomes research, and whether the result changes anything that matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Longevity Supplement Panel Claims | NAD, Methylation, Inflammation, Nutrients, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 657,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before buying?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the panel is meant for diagnosis, wellness, or research; what exact action it recommends; and whether those actions are safe if you have kidney disease, liver disease, pregnancy, or medications.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Longevity Supplement Panel Claims | NAD, Methylation, Inflammation, Nutrients, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-longevity-supplement-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 658,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a meditation score diagnose anxiety or depression?",
      "answer": "No. It may reflect engagement or calm-related signals, but it cannot diagnose a mental health condition.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Meditation Score Claims | HRV, Mindfulness Apps, Stress, Focus, EEG, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 659,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a single session prove improvement?",
      "answer": "No. One session can be affected by breathing, posture, attention, device fit, and the day you had.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Meditation Score Claims | HRV, Mindfulness Apps, Stress, Focus, EEG, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 660,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is HRV the same as mental health?",
      "answer": "No. HRV is a physiologic signal that can change for many reasons and does not equal mental health status.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Meditation Score Claims | HRV, Mindfulness Apps, Stress, Focus, EEG, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 661,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What would make the score more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "It should disclose its inputs, show validation against outcomes, and separate adherence metrics from health claims.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Meditation Score Claims | HRV, Mindfulness Apps, Stress, Focus, EEG, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 662,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should symptoms override the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Ongoing panic, insomnia, low mood, or physical symptoms need more weight than a dashboard score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Meditation Score Claims | HRV, Mindfulness Apps, Stress, Focus, EEG, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 663,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score is built from, what it predicts, and whether it is meant for habit support or a health claim.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Meditation Score Claims | HRV, Mindfulness Apps, Stress, Focus, EEG, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-meditation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 664,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does metabolic age diagnose anything?",
      "answer": "No. It is usually a comparison score built from body composition or estimated metabolic rate, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolic Age Score Claims | BIA Scales, Resting Metabolic Rate, Body Composition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 665,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can hydration change the score?",
      "answer": "Bioelectrical impedance is sensitive to water balance, so a different hydration state can shift the estimate.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolic Age Score Claims | BIA Scales, Resting Metabolic Rate, Body Composition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 666,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is metabolic age the same as resting metabolic rate?",
      "answer": "No. Resting metabolic rate is one possible input or comparison point, but the score is usually broader than that.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolic Age Score Claims | BIA Scales, Resting Metabolic Rate, Body Composition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 667,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is more actionable than the score?",
      "answer": "Weight trend, waist measurement, blood pressure, A1C, lipids, fitness, sleep, strength, and symptoms are usually more actionable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolic Age Score Claims | BIA Scales, Resting Metabolic Rate, Body Composition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 668,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can one weigh-in prove I got healthier?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. A single score can move because of hydration, device placement, or timing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolic Age Score Claims | BIA Scales, Resting Metabolic Rate, Body Composition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 669,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score is based on, what reference group it uses, whether hydration changes it, and what real decision it is supposed to change.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolic Age Score Claims | BIA Scales, Resting Metabolic Rate, Body Composition, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolic-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 670,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does metabolomics automatically mean personalized medicine?",
      "answer": "No. A broad panel can still be exploratory unless the specific claim is validated.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolomics Testing Claims | Blood, Urine, Wellness Scores, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 671,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a consumer report predict disease?",
      "answer": "Sometimes it can suggest associations, but prediction and diagnosis require much stronger evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolomics Testing Claims | Blood, Urine, Wellness Scores, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 672,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why are reference ranges hard to interpret?",
      "answer": "Because metabolites can vary with diet, medicines, sleep, exercise, microbiome, and sample handling.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolomics Testing Claims | Blood, Urine, Wellness Scores, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 673,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Are all metabolomics panels the same?",
      "answer": "No. Targeted, untargeted, and proprietary wellness panels can measure very different things.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolomics Testing Claims | Blood, Urine, Wellness Scores, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 674,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I change supplements from one report?",
      "answer": "Not without a clear clinical reason and a plan that has evidence behind it.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolomics Testing Claims | Blood, Urine, Wellness Scores, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 675,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the safest takeaway?",
      "answer": "Use the report as a hypothesis generator, not as a stand-alone health score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolomics Testing Claims | Blood, Urine, Wellness Scores, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 676,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "When should I trust the result less?",
      "answer": "Trust it less when the claim is broad, the reference range is proprietary, or the report does not show evidence that the result changes outcomes.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Metabolomics Testing Claims | Blood, Urine, Wellness Scores, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-metabolomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 677,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is an MTHFR result the same thing as a methylation panel?",
      "answer": "No. MTHFR is a genetic variant result, while methylation panels may also include epigenetic-age or DNA methylation data.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Methylation Panel Claims | MTHFR, Epigenetics, Biological Age, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 678,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do methylation panels diagnose fatigue or detox problems?",
      "answer": "Not by themselves. Those complaints need a medical evaluation, not just a proprietary score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Methylation Panel Claims | MTHFR, Epigenetics, Biological Age, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 679,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should I change supplements because of a methylation panel?",
      "answer": "Only if the change fits a real deficiency or clinical indication. A consumer score alone is not enough.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Methylation Panel Claims | MTHFR, Epigenetics, Biological Age, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 680,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What would make a methylation panel more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "It should clearly separate genetic variants from epigenetic measurements, show repeatability, and explain what clinical decision changes.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Methylation Panel Claims | MTHFR, Epigenetics, Biological Age, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 681,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is epigenetic age the same as biological age?",
      "answer": "Not exactly. Epigenetic age is one research way to estimate aging biology, but it is not a diagnosis or a universal truth about health.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Methylation Panel Claims | MTHFR, Epigenetics, Biological Age, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 682,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the report?",
      "answer": "Ask which markers are measured, whether the report is research or clinical, and whether any supplement recommendation is tied to a proven diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Methylation Panel Claims | MTHFR, Epigenetics, Biological Age, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-methylation-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 683,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can one micronutrient panel diagnose a deficiency?",
      "answer": "Sometimes it can identify a real problem, but the result should fit the symptom and risk pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Micronutrient Panel Claims | Vitamins, Minerals, Deficiency, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 684,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why are \"optimal\" ranges a red flag?",
      "answer": "Because some companies relabel normal values to make more people look abnormal.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Micronutrient Panel Claims | Vitamins, Minerals, Deficiency, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 685,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should I start supplements from the panel alone?",
      "answer": "Usually not. The panel should answer a clinical question before it drives treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Micronutrient Panel Claims | Vitamins, Minerals, Deficiency, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 686,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is vitamin D testing more useful?",
      "answer": "When risk factors, bone health, or a specific clinical question make the result actionable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Micronutrient Panel Claims | Vitamins, Minerals, Deficiency, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 687,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is vitamin B12 testing more useful?",
      "answer": "When anemia, neuropathy, diet pattern, medication use, or malabsorption makes deficiency plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Micronutrient Panel Claims | Vitamins, Minerals, Deficiency, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 688,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the safest use of a dashboard?",
      "answer": "Use it to narrow down one or two focused tests, not to launch a blanket supplement plan.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Micronutrient Panel Claims | Vitamins, Minerals, Deficiency, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-micronutrient-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 689,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a high lactate prove mitochondrial disease?",
      "answer": "No. Lactate can rise for many reasons, including illness, exercise, collection issues, and other metabolic problems.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Mitochondrial Function Test Claims | Lactate, Organic Acids, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 690,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a normal panel rule it out?",
      "answer": "No. Normal results do not exclude every mitochondrial disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Mitochondrial Function Test Claims | Lactate, Organic Acids, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 691,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Which symptoms deserve specialty evaluation?",
      "answer": "Progressive neurologic symptoms, seizures, stroke-like episodes, muscle weakness, exercise intolerance, multi-organ involvement, or strong family history deserve evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Mitochondrial Function Test Claims | Lactate, Organic Acids, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 692,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do sample handling and exercise matter?",
      "answer": "They can change lactate and related markers, which makes pre-analytic details essential.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Mitochondrial Function Test Claims | Lactate, Organic Acids, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 693,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What is the role of genetics?",
      "answer": "Genetics often helps confirm or classify a suspected inherited mitochondrial disorder when the clinical picture fits.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Mitochondrial Function Test Claims | Lactate, Organic Acids, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 694,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Are wellness mitochondrial panels useful?",
      "answer": "They can be interesting, but they should not be treated as a diagnosis or a universal fatigue explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Mitochondrial Function Test Claims | Lactate, Organic Acids, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 695,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if the panel is normal but symptoms worry me?",
      "answer": "A normal panel does not rule out every mitochondrial disorder, so symptoms and specialty evaluation still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Mitochondrial Function Test Claims | Lactate, Organic Acids, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-mitochondrial-function-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 696,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a nervous system balance score diagnose dysautonomia?",
      "answer": "No. It is usually a trend score, not a diagnostic autonomic test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nervous System Balance Score Claims | HRV, Stress, Sympathetic, Parasympathetic, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 697,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can sleep loss or illness change it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Sleep, stress, fever, alcohol, travel, and training load can all shift the signals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nervous System Balance Score Claims | HRV, Stress, Sympathetic, Parasympathetic, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 698,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is HRV a direct measure of vagal tone?",
      "answer": "Not exactly. HRV is influenced by vagal activity but also by many other factors and measurement conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nervous System Balance Score Claims | HRV, Stress, Sympathetic, Parasympathetic, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 699,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What would make the score more useful?",
      "answer": "It should explain its inputs, show validation, and clarify when symptoms need clinical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nervous System Balance Score Claims | HRV, Stress, Sympathetic, Parasympathetic, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 700,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should symptoms override the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Fainting, chest pain, shortness of breath, palpitations, or severe dizziness need more weight than the app score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nervous System Balance Score Claims | HRV, Stress, Sympathetic, Parasympathetic, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 701,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask what data it uses, how it handles posture and breathing, and whether it was validated against ECG-grade or clinical autonomic testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nervous System Balance Score Claims | HRV, Stress, Sympathetic, Parasympathetic, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nervous-system-balance-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 702,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a nootropic panel trying to measure?",
      "answer": "It is usually bundling nutrient, hormone, genetic, or wearable data into a brain-performance story. That can be useful for trends, but it is not the same as a medical diagnosis of cognition.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nootropic Panel Claims | Brain Supplements, Nutrient Tests, Genetics, Focus Scores, FDA Label Claims, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 703,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a nootropic panel diagnose ADHD or dementia?",
      "answer": "No. Those conditions need a clinical history, exam, and sometimes formal testing. A consumer panel may highlight clues, but it should not be treated as a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nootropic Panel Claims | Brain Supplements, Nutrient Tests, Genetics, Focus Scores, FDA Label Claims, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 704,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do nutrient results matter at all?",
      "answer": "Yes. Low B12, folate, iron, thyroid abnormalities, glucose problems, or other lab findings can matter if they match symptoms. The key is whether the result changes care, not whether it fits a marketing label.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nootropic Panel Claims | Brain Supplements, Nutrient Tests, Genetics, Focus Scores, FDA Label Claims, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 705,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Are genetic results enough to choose supplements?",
      "answer": "Usually no. A single genotype rarely determines a complete supplement plan, and many consumer genetics claims outpace clinical evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nootropic Panel Claims | Brain Supplements, Nutrient Tests, Genetics, Focus Scores, FDA Label Claims, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 706,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why is the hidden-drug issue important?",
      "answer": "Some products marketed for focus or energy can contain undeclared stimulant or other drug ingredients. That matters for blood pressure, sleep, anxiety, interactions, and safety.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nootropic Panel Claims | Brain Supplements, Nutrient Tests, Genetics, Focus Scores, FDA Label Claims, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 707,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if symptoms are the real issue?",
      "answer": "Memory loss, confusion, severe headache, fainting, major mood change, or neurologic symptoms need clinical evaluation even if a consumer panel looks reassuring.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Nootropic Panel Claims | Brain Supplements, Nutrient Tests, Genetics, Focus Scores, FDA Label Claims, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-nootropic-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 708,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does an organ-age score diagnose disease?",
      "answer": "No. A consumer organ-age score is usually exploratory. Abnormal results still need established medical tests and clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Organ-Age Testing Claims | Proteins, Biological Age, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 709,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which organs can be scored?",
      "answer": "Companies may talk about kidney, heart, liver, lung, or whole-body aging, but the labels are often proprietary and not standardized.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Organ-Age Testing Claims | Proteins, Biological Age, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 710,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can supplements lower the score and prove benefit?",
      "answer": "Not on their own. A lower score may reflect noise, timing, or unrelated changes. Clinical outcomes matter more than a proprietary number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Organ-Age Testing Claims | Proteins, Biological Age, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 711,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What standard tests should anchor the workup?",
      "answer": "The anchor depends on the organ: eGFR and urine albumin for kidney questions, blood pressure and lipids for heart risk, ALT and AST for liver questions, spirometry for lung symptoms, and symptom-based evaluation for others.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Organ-Age Testing Claims | Proteins, Biological Age, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 712,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why is organ-age validation hard?",
      "answer": "A good test needs stable measurement, an understandable reference population, and evidence that the score improves decisions and outcomes beyond standard care.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Organ-Age Testing Claims | Proteins, Biological Age, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 713,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask which markers drive the score, what outcome it predicts, whether it was validated prospectively, and what standard test should follow an abnormal result.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Organ-Age Testing Claims | Proteins, Biological Age, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-organ-age-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 714,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does an overtraining score diagnose overtraining syndrome?",
      "answer": "No. Overtraining syndrome is a clinical and performance pattern, not a single wearable number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Overtraining Score Claims | HRV, Cortisol, CK, Sleep, Performance, and Recovery Metrics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 715,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one hard workout change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Training load, sleep, illness, soreness, travel, and hydration can all move the signals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Overtraining Score Claims | HRV, Cortisol, CK, Sleep, Performance, and Recovery Metrics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 716,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should I trust CK or cortisol alone?",
      "answer": "No. Those tests are context dependent and are not enough by themselves to diagnose overtraining.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Overtraining Score Claims | HRV, Cortisol, CK, Sleep, Performance, and Recovery Metrics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 717,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What would make the score more useful?",
      "answer": "It should predict performance decline, illness, or recovery time, and it should show your personal baseline.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Overtraining Score Claims | HRV, Cortisol, CK, Sleep, Performance, and Recovery Metrics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 718,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should symptoms override the score?",
      "answer": "Persistent fatigue, weight loss, low mood, missed periods, recurrent illness, chest pain, or fainting should trigger clinical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Overtraining Score Claims | HRV, Cortisol, CK, Sleep, Performance, and Recovery Metrics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 719,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score uses, whether it has been validated against outcomes, and what happens if the score and your symptoms disagree.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Overtraining Score Claims | HRV, Cortisol, CK, Sleep, Performance, and Recovery Metrics",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-overtraining-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 720,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an oxidative stress score actually measure?",
      "answer": "It usually measures one or more markers related to antioxidants, oxidation, or related metabolites, but the exact meaning depends on the method.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxidative Stress Panel Claims | Free Radicals, Antioxidants, and Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 721,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose a disease?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Most consumer oxidative stress panels are exploratory and should not be used as stand-alone diagnoses.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxidative Stress Panel Claims | Free Radicals, Antioxidants, and Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 722,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are supplements the right response to a high score?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. The safest response is to ask whether the test is validated and whether a supplement would change a real outcome.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxidative Stress Panel Claims | Free Radicals, Antioxidants, and Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 723,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do results vary so much?",
      "answer": "Diet, smoking, illness, exercise, timing, and assay differences can all change the measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxidative Stress Panel Claims | Free Radicals, Antioxidants, and Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 724,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should be checked first if I am worried about health risk?",
      "answer": "Evidence-based care such as blood pressure, diabetes risk, lipid testing, sleep, exercise, and smoking status usually matters more than a proprietary score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxidative Stress Panel Claims | Free Radicals, Antioxidants, and Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 725,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is oxidative stress testing useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful when a validated test is tied to a specific question in research or clinical care.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxidative Stress Panel Claims | Free Radicals, Antioxidants, and Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 726,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if symptoms are the real problem?",
      "answer": "Then the symptom-based evaluation should take priority, because the score is not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxidative Stress Panel Claims | Free Radicals, Antioxidants, and Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxidative-stress-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 727,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does oxygen adaptation mean?",
      "answer": "It can mean acclimatization to altitude, recovery from illness, or training response, so the product needs to define the target clearly.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer oxygen adaptation score claims | altitude, SpO2, VO2, wearables, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 728,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can this score diagnose altitude sickness?",
      "answer": "No. Altitude illness is a clinical diagnosis based on symptoms, exposure history, and sometimes oxygen saturation or exam findings.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer oxygen adaptation score claims | altitude, SpO2, VO2, wearables, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 729,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a lower score mean I am not adapting?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Sleep, altitude, illness, motion, device fit, and sensor error can all shift the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer oxygen adaptation score claims | altitude, SpO2, VO2, wearables, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 730,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is this the same as a CPET result?",
      "answer": "No. CPET directly measures exercise ventilation and gas exchange; a consumer score usually infers a few signals from wearables.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer oxygen adaptation score claims | altitude, SpO2, VO2, wearables, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 731,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if I have symptoms but the score looks okay?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Shortness of breath, chest pain, confusion, fainting, blue lips, or low oxygen readings need real evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer oxygen adaptation score claims | altitude, SpO2, VO2, wearables, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 732,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what adaptation means, what signals are measured directly, what it was validated against, and whether it tells users when to seek care.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer oxygen adaptation score claims | altitude, SpO2, VO2, wearables, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-adaptation-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 733,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a consumer oxygen capacity score measure?",
      "answer": "It can be a proxy for VO2 max, SpO2, recovery, altitude response, or a blend of signals depending on the product.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Capacity Score Claims | VO2 Max, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 734,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is oxygen capacity the same as oxygen saturation?",
      "answer": "No. Oxygen saturation is a blood oxygen estimate, while oxygen capacity often implies a broader fitness or exercise-tolerance idea.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Capacity Score Claims | VO2 Max, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 735,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can anemia make the score look low?",
      "answer": "Yes. Anemia can lower exercise tolerance and can make oxygen-related trends feel worse even if the wearable is working normally.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Capacity Score Claims | VO2 Max, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 736,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do altitude and symptoms matter?",
      "answer": "Altitude changes oxygen availability, and symptoms can signal a real problem even when a wearable score looks acceptable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Capacity Score Claims | VO2 Max, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 737,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a wearable replace CPET or pulse oximetry?",
      "answer": "No. Wearables can be helpful for trends, but CPET and pulse oximetry are different tools with different purposes and validation levels.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Capacity Score Claims | VO2 Max, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 738,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should be cautious with these scores?",
      "answer": "People with known heart or lung disease, anemia, altitude exposure, or new breathing symptoms should rely on symptoms and medical testing rather than the score alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Capacity Score Claims | VO2 Max, SpO2, CPET, Wearables, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 739,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an oxygen debt score measure?",
      "answer": "Usually a mix of workout intensity, heart-rate response, recovery, and sometimes VO2-like or lactate-like model inputs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Debt Score Claims | Wearables, Exercise Recovery, VO2, CPET, Lactate, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 740,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is oxygen debt the same as blood lactate?",
      "answer": "No. Consumer scores may use lactate language, but that does not mean actual blood lactate was measured.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Debt Score Claims | Wearables, Exercise Recovery, VO2, CPET, Lactate, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 741,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can it tell me if I am overtrained?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Overtraining is a broader clinical and performance question that needs symptoms, trends, and context.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Debt Score Claims | Wearables, Exercise Recovery, VO2, CPET, Lactate, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 742,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does CPET matter here?",
      "answer": "CPET is a direct exercise test that measures physiologic responses more clearly than a black-box consumer score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Debt Score Claims | Wearables, Exercise Recovery, VO2, CPET, Lactate, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 743,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should low oxygen symptoms change how I read the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Breathing symptoms, chest pain, fainting, or blue lips matter more than the score and may need urgent care.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Debt Score Claims | Wearables, Exercise Recovery, VO2, CPET, Lactate, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 744,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should be cautious with these claims?",
      "answer": "People with anemia, heart disease, lung disease, altitude exposure, or new exercise intolerance should not rely on the score alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Debt Score Claims | Wearables, Exercise Recovery, VO2, CPET, Lactate, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 745,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is oxygen efficiency the same as VO2 max?",
      "answer": "No. A score may use VO2-like estimates, but true VO2 max is usually measured in a lab or during a supervised exercise test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VO2, CPET, Pulse Oximetry, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 746,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a wearable directly measure oxygen use?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Most wearables infer efficiency from heart rate, motion, breathing patterns, oxygen saturation, or recovery trends.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VO2, CPET, Pulse Oximetry, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 747,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What would make the score more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "Clear inputs, published validation against CPET or another reference, and a plain explanation of what the number can and cannot do.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VO2, CPET, Pulse Oximetry, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 748,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does low SpO2 matter more than the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Symptoms and clinically low oxygen readings should outrank any consumer efficiency score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VO2, CPET, Pulse Oximetry, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 749,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can the score diagnose lung disease or anemia?",
      "answer": "No. Those are clinical questions that need proper testing and interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VO2, CPET, Pulse Oximetry, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 750,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should be cautious with these claims?",
      "answer": "People with chest pain, fainting, unusual shortness of breath, known anemia, heart disease, lung disease, or altitude exposure should not rely on the score alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VO2, CPET, Pulse Oximetry, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 751,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an oxygen load score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is usually a proprietary composite of exercise strain, oxygen saturation, altitude, or recovery signals. The label is not standardized, so the developer has to explain the exact inputs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Load Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 752,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is oxygen load the same as a clinical oxygen test?",
      "answer": "No. Clinical oxygen evaluation may use pulse oximetry, blood gases, spirometry, or CPET. A consumer score is only useful if it is validated against the real measurement it claims to summarize.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Load Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 753,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can altitude change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Altitude can lower oxygen saturation and change exercise tolerance, so a good product should say whether it adjusts for elevation and travel history.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Load Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 754,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does validation matter so much?",
      "answer": "Without validation, the score may mainly reflect heart rate, motion, altitude, or sleep. That can be interesting, but it does not prove medical accuracy.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Load Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 755,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if I feel short of breath?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Severe shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, confusion, or blue lips need urgent medical attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Load Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 756,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the best sign the claim is trustworthy?",
      "answer": "The product should say exactly which inputs it uses, what it was validated against, how it handles sensor limits, and when the score is unreliable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Load Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 757,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a consumer oxygen readiness score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It usually means a proprietary mix of recovery, exercise, oxygen saturation, sleep, or altitude signals. The label itself is not standardized.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Recovery, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 758,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is oxygen readiness the same as oxygen saturation?",
      "answer": "No. Oxygen saturation is a blood oxygen estimate, while readiness usually implies a broader fitness or recovery idea.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Recovery, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 759,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can altitude change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Altitude can lower oxygen saturation and change exercise tolerance, so a good product should say whether it adjusts for elevation and travel history.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Recovery, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 760,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does validation matter so much?",
      "answer": "Without validation, the score may mainly reflect heart rate, motion, altitude, or sleep. That can be interesting, but it does not prove medical accuracy.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Recovery, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 761,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if I feel short of breath?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Severe shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, confusion, or blue lips need urgent medical attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Recovery, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 762,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the best sign the claim is trustworthy?",
      "answer": "The product should say exactly which inputs it uses, what it was validated against, how it handles sensor limits, and when the score is unreliable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Readiness Score Claims | Wearables, Recovery, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-readiness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 763,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a consumer oxygen recovery load score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It usually means a proprietary mix of recovery, exercise, oxygen saturation, sleep, or altitude signals. The label itself is not standardized.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Load Score Claims | Recovery, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 764,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is oxygen recovery load the same as oxygen saturation?",
      "answer": "No. Oxygen saturation is a blood oxygen estimate, while recovery load usually implies a broader fitness or recovery idea.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Load Score Claims | Recovery, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 765,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can altitude change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Altitude can lower oxygen saturation and change recovery, so a good product should say whether it adjusts for elevation and travel history.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Load Score Claims | Recovery, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 766,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does validation matter so much?",
      "answer": "Without validation, the score may mainly reflect heart rate, motion, altitude, or sleep. That can be interesting, but it does not prove medical accuracy.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Load Score Claims | Recovery, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 767,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if I feel short of breath?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Severe shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, confusion, or blue lips need urgent medical attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Load Score Claims | Recovery, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 768,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the best sign the claim is trustworthy?",
      "answer": "The product should say exactly which inputs it uses, what it was validated against, how it handles sensor limits, and when the score is unreliable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Load Score Claims | Recovery, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 769,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is oxygen recovery the same as VO2 recovery?",
      "answer": "Not always. VO2 recovery is a CPET-style concept measured with gas exchange. A consumer recovery score may just estimate related trends.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, VO2 Recovery, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 770,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can my smartwatch tell if I have recovered from illness?",
      "answer": "It can suggest a trend, but it cannot diagnose recovery from infection, anemia, asthma, COPD, or heart disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, VO2 Recovery, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 771,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does low oxygen saturation mean poor recovery?",
      "answer": "It can be a warning sign, but pulse oximetry has limitations and should be interpreted with symptoms and context.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, VO2 Recovery, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 772,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do clinicians still use CPET?",
      "answer": "Because it directly measures how the heart, lungs, and muscles respond to exertion and recovery.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, VO2 Recovery, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 773,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a high recovery score still miss a real problem?",
      "answer": "Yes. If symptoms are getting worse or you have chest pain, fainting, or low oxygen, the score can be falsely reassuring.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, VO2 Recovery, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 774,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is the score still useful?",
      "answer": "It can help spot trends over time, especially when you use it as one signal among symptoms, workload, sleep, and objective testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, VO2 Recovery, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 775,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an oxygen reserve score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It usually describes a rough estimate of physiologic headroom, but the exact meaning depends on the product and the inputs it uses.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 776,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is oxygen reserve the same as oxygen saturation?",
      "answer": "No. Oxygen saturation is one signal about blood oxygen, while reserve usually implies a broader trend or headroom idea.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 777,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can altitude lower the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Altitude reduces available oxygen and can make both measured and inferred scores shift.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 778,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can anemia or lung disease change it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Those conditions can change oxygen delivery and exercise tolerance, which is why context matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 779,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why is validation so important?",
      "answer": "Without validation, the score may mostly reflect the device algorithm rather than the physiology it claims to summarize.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 780,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I ignore the score and seek care?",
      "answer": "If symptoms are severe or worsening, or if oxygen is truly low, medical evaluation matters more than the score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, Altitude, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 781,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an oxygen strain score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is usually a composite of effort, oxygenation, or recovery signals, but the exact meaning depends on the app.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Strain Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 782,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is oxygen strain the same as clinical oxygen testing?",
      "answer": "No. Clinical testing uses direct measurements; consumer strain scores are often indirect estimates.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Strain Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 783,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can altitude change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Altitude can lower oxygen saturation and change effort, so the score should say how it handles elevation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Strain Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 784,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does validation matter?",
      "answer": "Without validation, the score may mostly track behavior or sensor noise rather than physiology.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Strain Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 785,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if I feel short of breath?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Severe or worsening symptoms need medical attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Strain Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 786,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What makes the claim more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "Clear inputs, a known validation group, and explicit safety guidance are the best signs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Strain Score Claims | Wearables, SpO2, VO2, CPET, and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 787,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a consumer oxygen utilization score usually mean?",
      "answer": "Usually a proxy for oxygen use, fitness, or recovery, but the exact meaning depends on the product.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Utilization Score Claims | VO2, CPET, SpO2, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 788,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is it the same as CPET?",
      "answer": "No. CPET directly measures gas exchange; consumer scores usually infer it.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Utilization Score Claims | VO2, CPET, SpO2, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 789,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can altitude or anemia change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Both can affect oxygen delivery and make the score look lower or more variable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Utilization Score Claims | VO2, CPET, SpO2, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 790,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a higher score prove better health?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. It may only reflect better fitness, a better algorithm fit, or different device conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Utilization Score Claims | VO2, CPET, SpO2, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 791,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What matters most when symptoms are present?",
      "answer": "Symptoms and low oxygen readings matter more than a consumer trend score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Utilization Score Claims | VO2, CPET, SpO2, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 792,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the best sign the claim is trustworthy?",
      "answer": "The company should say what is measured directly, what is inferred, and how it was validated.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Oxygen Utilization Score Claims | VO2, CPET, SpO2, Wearables, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-oxygen-utilization-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 793,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a detectable pesticide metabolite mean I was poisoned?",
      "answer": "No. It can simply mean exposure occurred; symptoms, timing, and the exact chemical matter a lot.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Pesticide Exposure Panel Claims | Urine Metabolites, Biomonitoring, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 794,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can food create pesticide biomonitoring signals?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some low-level signals can come from diet, household use, or other common exposures.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Pesticide Exposure Panel Claims | Urine Metabolites, Biomonitoring, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 795,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are company ranges the same as CDC or EPA levels?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Ask how the lab built its reference range and whether it is validated against public-health data.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Pesticide Exposure Panel Claims | Urine Metabolites, Biomonitoring, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 796,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if I have symptoms after a pesticide exposure?",
      "answer": "Call poison control or seek urgent care if symptoms are serious, because a home report should not guide emergency decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Pesticide Exposure Panel Claims | Urine Metabolites, Biomonitoring, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 797,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I repeat the test?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, if the timing is meaningful and the result will change a real exposure-reduction plan.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Pesticide Exposure Panel Claims | Urine Metabolites, Biomonitoring, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 798,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the safest use of the test?",
      "answer": "Use it to support a specific exposure question and a concrete safety step, not as a general detox score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Pesticide Exposure Panel Claims | Urine Metabolites, Biomonitoring, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-pesticide-exposure-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 799,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does proteomics testing diagnose disease by itself?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Proteomics can support a question, but diagnosis still depends on the clinical picture and standard tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Proteomics Testing Claims | Blood Proteins, Risk Scores, and Biomarker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 800,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do proteomics scores vary so much?",
      "answer": "Sample handling, platform differences, data normalization, and the biology of many proteins can all change the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Proteomics Testing Claims | Blood Proteins, Risk Scores, and Biomarker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 801,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a proteomics panel screen for cancer?",
      "answer": "Not unless the exact test and use are validated and supported by regulation or guidelines. Broad screening claims need strong proof.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Proteomics Testing Claims | Blood Proteins, Risk Scores, and Biomarker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 802,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What would make a proteomics score stronger?",
      "answer": "It should have clear sample handling, reproducibility, external validation, and evidence that it improves decisions beyond standard biomarkers.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Proteomics Testing Claims | Blood Proteins, Risk Scores, and Biomarker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 803,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I ignore standard blood tests if the proteomics score looks better?",
      "answer": "No. Standard tests still matter because they are usually better established for diagnosis and monitoring.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Proteomics Testing Claims | Blood Proteins, Risk Scores, and Biomarker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 804,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the report?",
      "answer": "Ask which proteins were measured, how the sample was handled, what population the score was validated in, and what clinical action follows an abnormal result.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Proteomics Testing Claims | Blood Proteins, Risk Scores, and Biomarker Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-proteomics-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 805,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does recovery age tell me how old I really am?",
      "answer": "No. It is usually an age-like label applied to readiness data, not a true biological age measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Age Score Claims | Wearables, Readiness, HRV, Sleep, Biological Age, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 806,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one bad night change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Sleep, alcohol, travel, illness, and stress can all move it without changing your long-term recovery capacity.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Age Score Claims | Wearables, Readiness, HRV, Sleep, Biological Age, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 807,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is it the same as overtraining?",
      "answer": "No. Overtraining is a broader clinical and performance problem. The score can only flag a possible trend.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Age Score Claims | Wearables, Readiness, HRV, Sleep, Biological Age, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 808,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What would make it more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "It should show what it predicts, how it was validated, and whether it adds something beyond sleep and HRV trends.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Age Score Claims | Wearables, Readiness, HRV, Sleep, Biological Age, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 809,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should symptoms override the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Fever, chest pain, fainting, severe shortness of breath, or unusual fatigue deserve more weight than the dashboard.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Age Score Claims | Wearables, Readiness, HRV, Sleep, Biological Age, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 810,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting it?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score is built from, whether it uses your baseline, and what it tells users to do when symptoms and the number disagree.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Age Score Claims | Wearables, Readiness, HRV, Sleep, Biological Age, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 811,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a recovery debt score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is a proprietary estimate of accumulated strain, but the exact meaning depends on the app and its inputs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Debt Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep Debt, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 812,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is recovery debt a medical diagnosis?",
      "answer": "No. It is a trend summary and should not be used to diagnose overtraining or illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Debt Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep Debt, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 813,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can alcohol or poor sleep change it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Both can alter HRV, resting heart rate, and how the algorithm reads recovery.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Debt Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep Debt, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 814,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why is validation important?",
      "answer": "Without validation, the score may reflect the device algorithm more than the physiology it claims to summarize.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Debt Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep Debt, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 815,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if I feel sick but the score looks fine?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. Feeling ill should override the app.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Debt Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep Debt, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 816,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is the score still useful?",
      "answer": "It can help you notice trends over time and plan training or rest with more context.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Debt Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep Debt, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 817,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a recovery reserve score?",
      "answer": "It is a proprietary estimate of extra recovery capacity, but the exact meaning depends on the product.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 818,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is reserve the same as readiness?",
      "answer": "They overlap, but one app may emphasize rest while another emphasizes training capacity.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 819,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can sleep loss change it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Sleep disruption can move HRV, resting heart rate, and the final score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 820,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is the score good for medical decisions?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. It is mainly a trend signal unless the company validates it for a specific use.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 821,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I train if the score is low?",
      "answer": "Use the score as one input, not a command. Symptoms and judgment matter too.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 822,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What makes the claim more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "Clear inputs, validation details, and explicit safety guidance are the best signs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Sleep, Training Load, Readiness, Fatigue, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 823,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a recovery supplement stack trying to improve?",
      "answer": "Usually it is trying to improve performance recovery, soreness, sleep, hydration, or a wearable readiness score. The important question is whether it improves a real-world outcome.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Supplement Stack Claims | Readiness Scores, HRV, Inflammation, Creatine, Protein, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 824,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a better readiness score prove the stack works?",
      "answer": "No. A score can move for many reasons, including sleep, stress, illness, alcohol, and measurement noise. It needs to be tied to something more concrete than the app itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Supplement Stack Claims | Readiness Scores, HRV, Inflammation, Creatine, Protein, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 825,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a stack be unsafe even if it is sold as natural?",
      "answer": "Yes. Herbs, amino acids, stimulants, sedatives, and high-dose vitamins can still interact with medicines or medical conditions, and product quality can vary.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Supplement Stack Claims | Readiness Scores, HRV, Inflammation, Creatine, Protein, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 826,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should CK or inflammation markers drive supplement dosing?",
      "answer": "Only with context. Creatine kinase and inflammatory markers can be useful, but they do not automatically mean more supplements are better or that the cause is training alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Supplement Stack Claims | Readiness Scores, HRV, Inflammation, Creatine, Protein, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 827,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make the claims more credible?",
      "answer": "Disclosed doses, quality testing, a clear target population, and an outcome such as sleep, soreness, injury risk, or performance are stronger than a vague readiness promise.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Supplement Stack Claims | Readiness Scores, HRV, Inflammation, Creatine, Protein, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 828,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should symptoms override the score?",
      "answer": "Symptoms such as chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, dark urine, severe muscle pain, or unusual weakness should override a dashboard score and prompt medical review.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Recovery Supplement Stack Claims | Readiness Scores, HRV, Inflammation, Creatine, Protein, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-recovery-supplement-stack-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 829,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a consumer respiratory capacity score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It can mean lung function, ventilation, exercise tolerance, or a composite estimate, depending on the app.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Capacity Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Lung Function, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 830,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is respiratory capacity the same as lung capacity?",
      "answer": "No. Lung capacity is a specific physiologic idea, while consumer scores often use broader proxies.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Capacity Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Lung Function, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 831,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can asthma, COPD, or anemia change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Those conditions can change breathing and oxygen delivery, which is why context matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Capacity Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Lung Function, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 832,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does CPET add that consumer devices do not?",
      "answer": "CPET measures physiology directly and can help separate ventilatory and cardiac limits.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Capacity Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Lung Function, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 833,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is a low score always a lung problem?",
      "answer": "No. Heart disease, anemia, infection, altitude, and sensor error can also affect the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Capacity Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Lung Function, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 834,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I trust the app less and seek care instead?",
      "answer": "If symptoms are worsening or oxygen is low, medical evaluation matters more than the score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Capacity Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Lung Function, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-capacity-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 835,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is this the same as CPET?",
      "answer": "No. CPET is a clinical exercise test that directly measures ventilation and gas exchange, while a consumer score usually infers a few of those signals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Efficiency Score Claims | CPET, Breathing Rate, SpO2, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 836,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does respiratory efficiency mean my lungs are healthy?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. A consumer score is usually a proxy label, not a direct lung-function measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Efficiency Score Claims | CPET, Breathing Rate, SpO2, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 837,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can it diagnose asthma or COPD?",
      "answer": "No. Diagnosis still depends on symptoms, exam findings, spirometry, and sometimes other pulmonary testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Efficiency Score Claims | CPET, Breathing Rate, SpO2, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 838,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do these scores change so much?",
      "answer": "Sleep, illness, altitude, anxiety, alcohol, exercise, and sensor fit can all change the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Efficiency Score Claims | CPET, Breathing Rate, SpO2, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 839,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the score looks fine but I feel short of breath?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. New or worsening shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, wheeze, or low oxygen readings need evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Efficiency Score Claims | CPET, Breathing Rate, SpO2, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 840,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what it was validated against, how it handles disease or altitude, whether it is cleared for clinical use, and how it handles noisy or missing sensor data.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Efficiency Score Claims | CPET, Breathing Rate, SpO2, VO2, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 841,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a respiratory fitness score diagnose lung or heart disease?",
      "answer": "No. These scores can be useful for trends, but they do not diagnose asthma, COPD, heart failure, anemia, pulmonary embolism, or sleep apnea.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Fitness Score Claims | VO2 Max, Breathing Rate, Pulse Ox, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 842,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does the score usually use as input?",
      "answer": "Wearable VO2 max estimates, heart-rate response, pace, breathing rate, oxygen saturation, sleep, and training history are common inputs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Fitness Score Claims | VO2 Max, Breathing Rate, Pulse Ox, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 843,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do different devices give different scores?",
      "answer": "Different sensors, algorithms, workout history, and assumptions about fitness can produce different estimates even in the same person.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Fitness Score Claims | VO2 Max, Breathing Rate, Pulse Ox, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 844,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is pulse oximetry enough to judge respiratory fitness?",
      "answer": "No. FDA warns that pulse oximeters have limitations, so a single oxygen reading does not establish cardiorespiratory fitness.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Fitness Score Claims | VO2 Max, Breathing Rate, Pulse Ox, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 845,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I use a lab test instead?",
      "answer": "Use lung function tests or CPET when symptoms matter, when a wearable estimate seems off, or when you need a more direct measurement of exercise capacity.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Fitness Score Claims | VO2 Max, Breathing Rate, Pulse Ox, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 846,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What symptoms should override the score?",
      "answer": "Chest pain, fainting, severe shortness of breath, blue lips, or low oxygen readings should override the app number and prompt medical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Fitness Score Claims | VO2 Max, Breathing Rate, Pulse Ox, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-fitness-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 847,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a respiratory load score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is usually a composite of breathing, oxygen, and effort signals rather than a direct medical measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Load Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, Illness, Training, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 848,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose pneumonia or asthma?",
      "answer": "No. It may help notice a trend, but it does not diagnose lung disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Load Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, Illness, Training, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 849,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do symptoms matter so much?",
      "answer": "Because severe or worsening symptoms can mean urgent illness even if the score looks okay.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Load Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, Illness, Training, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 850,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can altitude change it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Altitude can change oxygenation and respiratory strain, which may push the score around.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Load Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, Illness, Training, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 851,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "How trustworthy is it?",
      "answer": "Trust depends on whether the company discloses inputs, validation, and limitations.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Load Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, Illness, Training, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 852,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I seek care?",
      "answer": "If breathing symptoms are severe, new, or worsening, or if oxygen is low, get clinical help.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Load Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, Illness, Training, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 853,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a respiratory recovery burden score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is usually a proprietary trend estimate of how much breathing-related strain the app thinks you still have, not a direct lab measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Burden Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 854,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose asthma or pneumonia?",
      "answer": "No. It may help flag a change, but it does not diagnose lung disease or infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Burden Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 855,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do symptoms matter more than the score?",
      "answer": "Because severe or worsening symptoms can mean urgent illness even if the dashboard number looks acceptable.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Burden Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 856,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can altitude or sleep loss change it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Both can alter oxygenation, breathing rate, and how the wearable reads recovery.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Burden Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 857,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What makes the claim more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "Clear inputs, validation against a relevant outcome, and plain safety language are the best signs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Burden Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 858,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I seek care?",
      "answer": "If breathing is getting worse, oxygen is low, or you have chest pain, fainting, or blue lips, get medical help promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Burden Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, SpO2, CPET, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-burden-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 859,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a respiratory recovery load score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is a proprietary estimate that tries to summarize how much breathing-related load you still carry after workouts or illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Load Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 860,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it tell me whether I am sick?",
      "answer": "Not reliably by itself. It may notice a trend, but it does not diagnose infection or lung disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Load Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 861,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is validation important?",
      "answer": "Because a score can look precise even if it has never been tested against the outcomes users care about.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Load Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 862,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can travel or altitude change it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Travel, altitude, heat, poor sleep, and illness can all move the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Load Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 863,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I follow it if I feel unwell?",
      "answer": "No. Symptoms should outrank the score when the two disagree.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Load Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 864,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What makes the claim more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "Clear inputs, outcome-based validation, and explicit safety guidance make the claim stronger.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Load Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-load-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 865,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a respiratory recovery score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It usually summarizes a mix of wearable signals that the company believes reflect recent respiratory strain and recovery.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 866,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is it the same as a clinical recovery check?",
      "answer": "No. It is a trend signal, not a substitute for lung testing or medical assessment.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 867,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can asthma or anemia change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Both can affect breathing, oxygen delivery, and exercise tolerance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 868,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does validation matter?",
      "answer": "Because trend scores can look scientific without being accurate enough for medical decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 869,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I ignore symptoms if the score is good?",
      "answer": "No. Symptoms always matter more when they suggest a real problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 870,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What makes the claim stronger?",
      "answer": "Transparent inputs, real validation, and clear safety language are the biggest trust signals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Recovery Score Claims | Wearables, Respiratory Rate, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-recovery-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 871,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a respiratory reserve score mean my lungs are healthy?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. It is usually a proxy score and does not directly measure lung function or airflow.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer respiratory reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 872,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose asthma or COPD?",
      "answer": "No. Diagnosis still depends on symptoms, exam findings, spirometry, and sometimes other pulmonary testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer respiratory reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 873,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is this the same as CPET or spirometry?",
      "answer": "No. CPET is a clinical exercise test that directly measures ventilation and gas exchange, while spirometry measures airflow and lung volumes in a clinical setting.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer respiratory reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 874,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do respiratory reserve scores change so much?",
      "answer": "Sleep, illness, altitude, exercise, medications, anxiety, and sensor fit can all change the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer respiratory reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 875,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the score looks fine but I feel short of breath?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. New or worsening shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, wheeze, or low oxygen readings need evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer respiratory reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 876,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what it predicts, what it was validated against, how it handles noisy data, and whether it gives symptom-based safety guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer respiratory reserve score claims | CPET, ventilatory reserve, and validation limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 877,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a respiratory resilience score mean my lungs are healthy?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. It is usually a proxy trend label, not a direct measurement of lung function.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Resilience Score Claims | Wearables, Illness Recovery, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 878,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose asthma or COPD?",
      "answer": "No. Diagnosis still depends on symptoms, exam findings, and pulmonary function testing such as spirometry.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Resilience Score Claims | Wearables, Illness Recovery, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 879,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How is this different from CPET?",
      "answer": "CPET is a clinical exercise test that directly measures ventilation and gas exchange. A wearable score may only infer a few of those signals.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Resilience Score Claims | Wearables, Illness Recovery, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 880,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do these scores change so much?",
      "answer": "Sleep, illness, altitude, anxiety, exercise, medications, and sensor fit can all change the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Resilience Score Claims | Wearables, Illness Recovery, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 881,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if I am short of breath but the score looks fine?",
      "answer": "Symptoms matter more than the score. New or worsening shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, wheeze, or low oxygen should be evaluated.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Resilience Score Claims | Wearables, Illness Recovery, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 882,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what it was validated against, whether it clearly defines the score, how it handles noisy data, and whether it gives symptom-based safety guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Resilience Score Claims | Wearables, Illness Recovery, Oxygen Saturation, CPET, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-resilience-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 883,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a respiratory strain score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is usually an app-defined trend score that tries to summarize breathing-related workload or stress.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Strain Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing Load, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 884,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose lung disease?",
      "answer": "No. It can at most suggest a trend; it cannot diagnose asthma, COPD, pneumonia, or another lung problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Strain Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing Load, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 885,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does context matter so much?",
      "answer": "Because altitude, sleep, infection, and sensor quality can all shift the number for reasons that have nothing to do with disease severity.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Strain Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing Load, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 886,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can I trust a low score if I feel okay?",
      "answer": "Maybe as a trend signal, but not as a diagnosis. Symptoms and clinical context still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Strain Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing Load, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 887,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What makes the claim more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "A clear description of the inputs, outcome-based validation, and explicit warning language.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Strain Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing Load, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 888,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get medical help?",
      "answer": "If breathing is worsening, oxygen is low, or symptoms are severe, seek care promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Respiratory Strain Score Claims | Wearables, Breathing Load, CPET, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-respiratory-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 889,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a sleep debt score diagnose a sleep disorder?",
      "answer": "No. It can point to patterns, but it cannot diagnose insomnia, sleep apnea, narcolepsy, restless legs, or another sleep disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sleep Debt Score Claims | Sleep Duration, Circadian Timing, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 890,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does the score usually use as input?",
      "answer": "Wearable sleep duration, sleep timing, recovery scores, resting heart rate, and sometimes HRV or respiratory data are common inputs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sleep Debt Score Claims | Sleep Duration, Circadian Timing, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 891,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do different apps give different sleep debt numbers?",
      "answer": "Apps use different sensors, different sleep-scoring algorithms, and different assumptions about how much sleep you need.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sleep Debt Score Claims | Sleep Duration, Circadian Timing, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 892,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is a short night always sleep debt?",
      "answer": "Not always. One short night may be a temporary pattern, but persistent restriction or bad sleep quality is more likely to matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sleep Debt Score Claims | Sleep Duration, Circadian Timing, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 893,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I ask a clinician instead of trusting the score?",
      "answer": "Ask a clinician if you snore loudly, gasp in sleep, have excessive daytime sleepiness, drowsy driving, chronic insomnia, or unexplained fatigue.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sleep Debt Score Claims | Sleep Duration, Circadian Timing, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 894,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can sleep debt scores help with habits?",
      "answer": "Yes. They can help you see whether sleep timing, caffeine, alcohol, shift work, or travel are affecting your pattern over time.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sleep Debt Score Claims | Sleep Duration, Circadian Timing, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sleep-debt-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 895,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a strain score diagnose overtraining or burnout?",
      "answer": "No. It can flag a trend, but it does not diagnose overtraining, burnout, infection, or injury.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Strain Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Training Load, Stress, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 896,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What inputs usually feed the score?",
      "answer": "Common inputs include heart rate, heart-rate variability, sleep, activity load, recent recovery, and sometimes temperature or symptom data.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Strain Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Training Load, Stress, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 897,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do different apps give different strain numbers?",
      "answer": "Different sensors, formulas, baselines, and definitions of strain lead to different scores even for the same person.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Strain Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Training Load, Stress, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 898,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is HRV enough to judge strain?",
      "answer": "No. HRV can be informative, but it can move for many reasons and should be interpreted with sleep, illness, training load, and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Strain Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Training Load, Stress, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 899,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if the score is high but I feel unwell?",
      "answer": "Treat pain, fever, dizziness, chest symptoms, unusual shortness of breath, or a strong sense that something is off as more important than the app number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Strain Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Training Load, Stress, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 900,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the app?",
      "answer": "Ask what the score predicts, how it was validated, how it handles noisy sensor data, and whether it clearly says what not to use it for.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Strain Score Claims | Wearables, HRV, Training Load, Stress, Recovery, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-strain-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 901,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a sweat electrolyte score the same as a blood electrolyte test?",
      "answer": "No. A sweat score can estimate exercise fluid or sodium loss, but it does not measure serum sodium, potassium, or magnesium.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sweat Electrolyte Score Claims | Hydration, Sodium Loss, Sports Use, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 902,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a sweat score diagnose dehydration?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Symptoms, fluid intake, urine output, and sometimes blood or urine testing matter more.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sweat Electrolyte Score Claims | Hydration, Sodium Loss, Sports Use, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 903,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is a sweat score most useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful for sports, heat exposure, and planning hydration for repeatable training conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sweat Electrolyte Score Claims | Hydration, Sodium Loss, Sports Use, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 904,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What can make the score unreliable?",
      "answer": "Sensor placement, skin contamination, sweat rate changes, temperature, acclimatization, and the company’s algorithm can all shift the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sweat Electrolyte Score Claims | Hydration, Sodium Loss, Sports Use, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 905,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can more fluid always improve the score?",
      "answer": "No. Drinking too much fluid can contribute to low blood sodium, especially during prolonged exercise.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sweat Electrolyte Score Claims | Hydration, Sodium Loss, Sports Use, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 906,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do if I feel unwell in heat?",
      "answer": "Stop the activity, cool down, and seek medical care if you have confusion, fainting, severe weakness, or very little urination.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sweat Electrolyte Score Claims | Hydration, Sodium Loss, Sports Use, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 907,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Which symptoms should override the score?",
      "answer": "Confusion, fainting, rapid breathing, rapid heartbeat, dark urine, or very little urination should override the score and prompt immediate action.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Sweat Electrolyte Score Claims | Hydration, Sodium Loss, Sports Use, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-sweat-electrolyte-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 908,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does telomere length tell me my true biological age?",
      "answer": "Not reliably. Telomere length can be associated with aging biology, but it is not a personal age calculator or a stand-alone risk score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Telomere Length Testing Claims | Biological Age, Longevity, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 909,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a supplement lengthen my telomeres and prove benefit?",
      "answer": "A change on repeat testing does not prove better health. You would need reproducibility, a known assay, and better outcomes, not just a shifted number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Telomere Length Testing Claims | Biological Age, Longevity, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 910,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do different telomere tests disagree?",
      "answer": "Different cell types, methods, normalization approaches, and lab variability can all change the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Telomere Length Testing Claims | Biological Age, Longevity, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 911,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is this useful for cancer or heart disease screening?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Standard screening and risk markers still do the heavy lifting for those decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Telomere Length Testing Claims | Biological Age, Longevity, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 912,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make a telomere test more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "It should clearly state the method, reference population, analytic variability, and whether the result changes any real clinical decision.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Telomere Length Testing Claims | Biological Age, Longevity, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 913,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the report?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the test is a wellness product or a validated medical assay, what tissue is measured, and what action the score supports.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Telomere Length Testing Claims | Biological Age, Longevity, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-telomere-length-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 914,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a training age score usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is usually a fitness-style label that tries to combine training history, VO2 estimates, recovery, or performance patterns into an age-like number. The term is not standardized, so the company must explain the exact formula.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Training Age Score Claims | Fitness Age, VO2 Max Estimates, Training Load, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 915,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is training age the same as VO2 max?",
      "answer": "No. VO2 max is a specific physiologic measurement or estimate, while training age is usually a consumer label that may include VO2, but can also include training load and recovery data.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Training Age Score Claims | Fitness Age, VO2 Max Estimates, Training Load, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 916,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does validation matter?",
      "answer": "Without validation against exercise testing or other accepted measures, the score may just reflect recent activity or algorithm assumptions rather than actual fitness.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Training Age Score Claims | Fitness Age, VO2 Max Estimates, Training Load, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 917,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can symptoms override the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Chest pain, fainting, unusual shortness of breath, palpitations, or exercise intolerance need medical evaluation even if the score looks good.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Training Age Score Claims | Fitness Age, VO2 Max Estimates, Training Load, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 918,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should the product disclose?",
      "answer": "It should say what inputs it uses, what it was compared against, how often it updates, and what user groups were studied.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Training Age Score Claims | Fitness Age, VO2 Max Estimates, Training Load, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 919,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "How should I use the number?",
      "answer": "Use it as a trend unless the product proves that it can reliably predict a real health or performance outcome that matters to you.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Training Age Score Claims | Fitness Age, VO2 Max Estimates, Training Load, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-training-age-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 920,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a vagal tone score trying to estimate?",
      "answer": "It usually tries to summarize a pattern related to parasympathetic activity using HRV or other wearable signals. It is a wellness proxy, not a direct nerve test.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Vagal Tone Score Claims | HRV, Parasympathetic Activity, Stress, Recovery, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 921,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it diagnose dysautonomia or vagal nerve injury?",
      "answer": "No. Those diagnoses rely on symptoms, exam findings, and clinical autonomic testing, not a consumer score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Vagal Tone Score Claims | HRV, Parasympathetic Activity, Stress, Recovery, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 922,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can breathing change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Breathing rate, breath-holds, and whether the measurement is taken in a quiet, controlled setting can all change HRV-related numbers.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Vagal Tone Score Claims | HRV, Parasympathetic Activity, Stress, Recovery, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 923,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do scores vary so much day to day?",
      "answer": "Sleep, illness, alcohol, medications, stress, posture, travel, and sensor quality can all change the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Vagal Tone Score Claims | HRV, Parasympathetic Activity, Stress, Recovery, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 924,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What would make the score more trustworthy?",
      "answer": "A clear explanation of what the device measures, how it handles breathing and motion, and what it was validated against would make the claim stronger.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Vagal Tone Score Claims | HRV, Parasympathetic Activity, Stress, Recovery, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 925,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should symptoms matter more than the app?",
      "answer": "If you have fainting, chest pain, shortness of breath, palpitations, or severe dizziness, the symptom picture matters more than a wellness score.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Vagal Tone Score Claims | HRV, Parasympathetic Activity, Stress, Recovery, and Wearable Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-vagal-tone-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 926,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is ventilation efficiency in CPET?",
      "answer": "It is a measure of how much breathing is needed to clear carbon dioxide during exercise.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilation Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VE/VCO2, CPET, Breathing, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 927,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a wearable measure that directly?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Most consumer products infer a related trend rather than measuring gas exchange.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilation Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VE/VCO2, CPET, Breathing, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 928,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does validation matter?",
      "answer": "Because a score can sound clinical without actually matching the CPET measure it borrows from.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilation Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VE/VCO2, CPET, Breathing, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 929,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can altitude or asthma change it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Both can affect breathing patterns and oxygenation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilation Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VE/VCO2, CPET, Breathing, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 930,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I ignore symptoms if the score looks fine?",
      "answer": "No. Symptoms and oxygen concerns matter more than the dashboard number.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilation Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VE/VCO2, CPET, Breathing, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 931,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What makes the claim trustworthy?",
      "answer": "Direct measurement, clear validation, and explicit limits are the strongest signs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilation Efficiency Score Claims | Wearables, VE/VCO2, CPET, Breathing, Oxygen Saturation, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilation-efficiency-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 932,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does ventilatory reserve mean?",
      "answer": "It is a clinical concept about how much breathing capacity remains at peak effort.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilatory Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Breathing Reserve, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 933,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a smartwatch really measure it?",
      "answer": "Usually not directly. Most consumer scores infer related trends rather than measuring ventilation.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilatory Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Breathing Reserve, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 934,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is CPET important here?",
      "answer": "CPET is the clinical setting where reserve is measured and interpreted.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilatory Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Breathing Reserve, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 935,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can asthma or anemia change the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Those conditions can alter breathing, oxygen delivery, and exercise tolerance.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilatory Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Breathing Reserve, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 936,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I trust a low score if I feel okay?",
      "answer": "Maybe as a trend signal, but not as a diagnosis. Symptoms and clinical context matter too.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilatory Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Breathing Reserve, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 937,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What makes the claim trustworthy?",
      "answer": "Clear inputs, validation data, and explicit limits are the strongest signs.",
      "pageTitle": "Consumer Ventilatory Reserve Score Claims | Wearables, CPET, Breathing Reserve, Respiratory Rate, and Validation Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/consumer-ventilatory-reserve-score-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 938,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a cuffless wearable replace a home cuff?",
      "answer": "Not unless it has strong validation for the intended use. For routine home management, a validated upper-arm cuff is still the safer default.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring Claims | Cuffless Wearables, Validation, Home Cuffs, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 939,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the biggest problem with cuffless blood pressure claims?",
      "answer": "Validation. A stylish trend line is not the same as a clinically reliable blood pressure measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring Claims | Cuffless Wearables, Validation, Home Cuffs, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 940,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What should I do if my wearable and cuff disagree?",
      "answer": "Treat the validated cuff and clinician advice as the reference point, and recheck technique, cuff size, and timing.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring Claims | Cuffless Wearables, Validation, Home Cuffs, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 941,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is ambulatory blood pressure monitoring the same thing as a wearable?",
      "answer": "No. Ambulatory monitoring is a clinical test with a validated device that records blood pressure over time under defined conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring Claims | Cuffless Wearables, Validation, Home Cuffs, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 942,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do wrist or finger monitors solve the problem?",
      "answer": "Not really. AHA says wrist and finger monitors are less reliable than an upper-arm cuff for home use.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring Claims | Cuffless Wearables, Validation, Home Cuffs, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 943,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I seek care immediately?",
      "answer": "If blood pressure is very high and you have chest pain, shortness of breath, weakness, vision changes, numbness, or trouble speaking, get urgent medical help.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring Claims | Cuffless Wearables, Validation, Home Cuffs, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 944,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What counts as validation?",
      "answer": "Validation means testing the device against a recognized blood pressure method in the people and settings it claims to serve, not just showing that it tracks a trend.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring Claims | Cuffless Wearables, Validation, Home Cuffs, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-blood-pressure-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 945,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does continuous ketone monitoring measure?",
      "answer": "It usually aims to estimate beta-hydroxybutyrate or a related ketone signal over time, often from interstitial fluid.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Ketone Monitoring Claims | Beta-Hydroxybutyrate, DKA Safety, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 946,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it replace fingerstick ketone checks?",
      "answer": "Not today for most consumer use cases. If the result could change treatment, confirm with a validated blood or urine ketone method.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Ketone Monitoring Claims | Beta-Hydroxybutyrate, DKA Safety, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 947,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is continuous ketone monitoring useful for DKA?",
      "answer": "Potentially as an adjunct someday, but DKA symptoms and medical ketone testing remain the important safety net now.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Ketone Monitoring Claims | Beta-Hydroxybutyrate, DKA Safety, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 948,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do higher ketones always mean better keto results?",
      "answer": "No. More ketones are not automatically better, and the number alone does not prove better health or fat loss.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Ketone Monitoring Claims | Beta-Hydroxybutyrate, DKA Safety, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 949,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What can make the reading unreliable?",
      "answer": "Lag, calibration drift, sensor failure, sweat, hydration, and the gap between interstitial and blood ketones can all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Ketone Monitoring Claims | Beta-Hydroxybutyrate, DKA Safety, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 950,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should someone with diabetes do if they feel sick?",
      "answer": "Follow the sick-day plan from their diabetes team, check glucose and ketones, and get urgent care for DKA symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Ketone Monitoring Claims | Beta-Hydroxybutyrate, DKA Safety, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 951,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Which symptoms mean ketones are urgent?",
      "answer": "Nausea or vomiting, abdominal pain, confusion, trouble breathing, extreme sleepiness, and fruity-smelling breath are warning signs that need urgent medical attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Continuous Ketone Monitoring Claims | Beta-Hydroxybutyrate, DKA Safety, Validation, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/continuous-ketone-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 952,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a single morning cortisol enough?",
      "answer": "Often not. Morning cortisol is only one data point and usually needs timing context, symptoms, and sometimes ACTH or stimulation testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Blood Test | Timing, Saliva and Urine Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 953,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why would my doctor order saliva or urine instead of blood?",
      "answer": "Different specimen types answer different questions: late-night saliva can screen for loss of the normal daily rhythm, while urine estimates total daily output.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Blood Test | Timing, Saliva and Urine Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 954,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can stress raise cortisol?",
      "answer": "Yes. Illness, surgery, sleep disruption, exercise, and pain can all shift cortisol, so stress alone does not diagnose an endocrine disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Blood Test | Timing, Saliva and Urine Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 955,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What makes cortisol look too low?",
      "answer": "Adrenal insufficiency, pituitary problems, steroid withdrawal, and poor timing of the sample can all lower the value.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Blood Test | Timing, Saliva and Urine Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 956,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does ACTH add?",
      "answer": "ACTH helps tell whether the body is sending the right signal to the adrenal glands, which is why it is often paired with cortisol.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Blood Test | Timing, Saliva and Urine Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 957,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What happens if the cortisol result does not fit the symptoms?",
      "answer": "Repeat or confirmatory testing is common. Doctors often choose a different specimen or add suppression or stimulation testing before deciding on imaging or treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Blood Test | Timing, Saliva and Urine Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 958,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is saliva or blood better for cortisol?",
      "answer": "Neither is universally better. Blood is often used for low-cortisol questions, saliva is often used for late-night screening in suspected Cushing syndrome, and urine reflects total daily output.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Saliva vs Blood Test Guide | Timing, Urine, Cushing, and Adrenal Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 959,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does late-night salivary cortisol check?",
      "answer": "It looks for loss of the normal nighttime cortisol drop, which can help screen for Cushing syndrome in the right clinical setting.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Saliva vs Blood Test Guide | Timing, Urine, Cushing, and Adrenal Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 960,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a morning blood cortisol diagnose adrenal insufficiency?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Morning blood cortisol can raise suspicion, but timing, illness, and medicines can change the result and further testing may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Saliva vs Blood Test Guide | Timing, Urine, Cushing, and Adrenal Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 961,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can stress raise cortisol?",
      "answer": "Yes. Acute illness, pain, surgery, sleep loss, and some medicines can shift cortisol, but that does not by itself prove endocrine disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Saliva vs Blood Test Guide | Timing, Urine, Cushing, and Adrenal Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 962,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do doctors order 24-hour urine free cortisol?",
      "answer": "It estimates total cortisol production across a full day and is one of the standard ways to evaluate cortisol excess.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Saliva vs Blood Test Guide | Timing, Urine, Cushing, and Adrenal Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 963,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should one abnormal cortisol result be repeated?",
      "answer": "Often yes. Cortisol can vary by time of day and collection quality, so repeat or confirmatory testing is common when the first result does not fit the clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Cortisol Saliva vs Blood Test Guide | Timing, Urine, Cushing, and Adrenal Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cortisol-saliva-vs-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 964,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a CK blood test measure?",
      "answer": "A CK blood test measures creatine kinase, also called creatine phosphokinase or CPK. CK is an enzyme found mostly in skeletal muscle, with smaller amounts in heart and brain tissue. Higher blood levels can appear when muscle cells are stressed or injured.",
      "pageTitle": "Creatine Kinase CK Blood Test Guide | High CK, Rhabdomyolysis, Exercise, and Muscle Injury",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 965,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can exercise raise CK?",
      "answer": "Yes. Strenuous exercise, heavy lifting, endurance events, new workouts, muscle trauma, injections, and recent surgery can raise CK. Timing matters because CK may remain elevated for days after muscle strain or injury.",
      "pageTitle": "Creatine Kinase CK Blood Test Guide | High CK, Rhabdomyolysis, Exercise, and Muscle Injury",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 966,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does high CK mean rhabdomyolysis?",
      "answer": "Not always. Rhabdomyolysis is a serious muscle breakdown syndrome, but CK can rise from many causes. Rhabdomyolysis is more concerning when high CK occurs with severe muscle pain, weakness, swelling, dark urine, dehydration, heat illness, kidney changes, or electrolyte abnormalities.",
      "pageTitle": "Creatine Kinase CK Blood Test Guide | High CK, Rhabdomyolysis, Exercise, and Muscle Injury",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 967,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests may follow a high CK result?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CK, kidney function tests such as creatinine and eGFR, electrolytes including potassium, calcium, and phosphate, urinalysis, urine or blood myoglobin in selected cases, liver enzymes, thyroid testing, inflammatory or autoimmune muscle tests, and troponin if chest symptoms are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Creatine Kinase CK Blood Test Guide | High CK, Rhabdomyolysis, Exercise, and Muscle Injury",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 968,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is CK used for heart attack testing?",
      "answer": "CK can rise with heart muscle injury, but troponin is usually the preferred blood test for possible heart attack because it is more specific for heart muscle injury. Chest pain, shortness of breath, ECG findings, and repeat troponin testing matter more than CK alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Creatine Kinase CK Blood Test Guide | High CK, Rhabdomyolysis, Exercise, and Muscle Injury",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/creatine-kinase-ck-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 969,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a CRP test measure?",
      "answer": "A CRP test measures C-reactive protein, a protein made by the liver that rises when inflammation is present somewhere in the body.",
      "pageTitle": "CRP and hs-CRP Blood Test Guide | Inflammation, Heart Risk, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 970,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What can cause a high CRP result?",
      "answer": "CRP may rise with infection, injury, autoimmune or inflammatory disease, surgery, obesity, smoking, and other sources of inflammation. The result does not identify the cause by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "CRP and hs-CRP Blood Test Guide | Inflammation, Heart Risk, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 971,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is hs-CRP the same as standard CRP?",
      "answer": "No. Standard CRP is commonly used to look for or monitor inflammation. High-sensitivity CRP measures smaller changes and may be used with other risk factors to refine cardiovascular risk discussions.",
      "pageTitle": "CRP and hs-CRP Blood Test Guide | Inflammation, Heart Risk, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 972,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a high hs-CRP result mean you have heart disease?",
      "answer": "No. hs-CRP is not a diagnosis of heart disease and does not show where inflammation is coming from. It is interpreted with cholesterol, blood pressure, diabetes, smoking, age, family history, and overall cardiovascular risk.",
      "pageTitle": "CRP and hs-CRP Blood Test Guide | Inflammation, Heart Risk, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 973,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should CRP or hs-CRP be repeated?",
      "answer": "Often, yes, especially if the test was drawn during an illness, injury, flare, or other temporary inflammatory trigger. Ask the ordering clinician whether repeat testing should wait until acute inflammation has resolved.",
      "pageTitle": "CRP and hs-CRP Blood Test Guide | Inflammation, Heart Risk, Results, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/crp-hs-crp-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 974,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Crypto stool test always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always, but it is most meaningful when watery diarrhea and exposure history fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Cryptosporidium Stool Test | Crypto PCR, Antigen, O&P, Repeat Samples, and Water Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 975,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do labs sometimes ask for more than one stool sample?",
      "answer": "Because shedding can be intermittent, and repeat specimens can improve detection.",
      "pageTitle": "Cryptosporidium Stool Test | Crypto PCR, Antigen, O&P, Repeat Samples, and Water Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 976,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is routine ova and parasite testing enough for Crypto?",
      "answer": "Not always. The lab may need a Crypto-specific request or a PCR method that includes it.",
      "pageTitle": "Cryptosporidium Stool Test | Crypto PCR, Antigen, O&P, Repeat Samples, and Water Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 977,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What exposures make Crypto more likely?",
      "answer": "Pools, splash pads, lakes, untreated water, child care, animal exposure, and travel can all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Cryptosporidium Stool Test | Crypto PCR, Antigen, O&P, Repeat Samples, and Water Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 978,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does immune status change how urgent the result is?",
      "answer": "Yes. Crypto can be more prolonged or severe when the immune system is weakened.",
      "pageTitle": "Cryptosporidium Stool Test | Crypto PCR, Antigen, O&P, Repeat Samples, and Water Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 979,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can a GI panel detect Crypto?",
      "answer": "Yes, if Cryptosporidium is one of the panel targets. The exact panel list matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Cryptosporidium Stool Test | Crypto PCR, Antigen, O&P, Repeat Samples, and Water Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cryptosporidium-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 980,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a negative repeat test rule out Cyclospora?",
      "answer": "No. A single negative stool test does not always rule it out, especially if the lab was not specifically asked to look for Cyclospora or if specimens were not collected at the right time.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora repeat testing after treatment | Persistent diarrhea, relapse, reinfection, and public-health follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 981,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why are multiple stool specimens sometimes needed?",
      "answer": "Cyclospora can be shed intermittently, so more than one specimen collected over different days can improve the chance of detection.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora repeat testing after treatment | Persistent diarrhea, relapse, reinfection, and public-health follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 982,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is PCR always better than microscopy?",
      "answer": "PCR can be useful, but the best method depends on what the lab offers and how the specimen was handled. Some settings still rely on microscopy, modified acid-fast staining, or special requests.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora repeat testing after treatment | Persistent diarrhea, relapse, reinfection, and public-health follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 983,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should persistent symptoms raise concern for relapse?",
      "answer": "If watery diarrhea or weight loss continues after treatment, the question becomes relapse, reinfection, or another cause rather than assuming the first result explains everything.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora repeat testing after treatment | Persistent diarrhea, relapse, reinfection, and public-health follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 984,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can Cyclospora spread from person to person?",
      "answer": "Direct person-to-person spread is considered unlikely because the parasite must sporulate in the environment before it becomes infectious.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora repeat testing after treatment | Persistent diarrhea, relapse, reinfection, and public-health follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 985,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why does public-health reporting matter?",
      "answer": "Cyclospora is often linked to produce and outbreaks, so confirmed cases may need reporting and outbreak context can change how repeat testing is interpreted.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora repeat testing after treatment | Persistent diarrhea, relapse, reinfection, and public-health follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-repeat-testing-after-treatment.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 986,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Cyclospora stool test always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always, but it is most meaningful when prolonged watery diarrhea and exposure history fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora Stool Test | PCR, Acid-Fast Stain, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 987,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is Cyclospora often missed on routine testing?",
      "answer": "It is not included in every panel or routine O&P request, so a specific request or PCR may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora Stool Test | PCR, Acid-Fast Stain, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 988,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make Cyclospora more likely?",
      "answer": "Fresh produce, travel, outbreak exposure, and contaminated food or water are classic clues.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora Stool Test | PCR, Acid-Fast Stain, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 989,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can symptoms come and go?",
      "answer": "Yes. Relapsing or prolonged watery diarrhea is a common pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora Stool Test | PCR, Acid-Fast Stain, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 990,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does public health matter here?",
      "answer": "Cyclospora is often linked to foodborne outbreaks, so confirmed cases can need reporting and tracing.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora Stool Test | PCR, Acid-Fast Stain, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 991,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need treatment?",
      "answer": "Treatment depends on symptoms and clinician judgment, but prolonged illness usually deserves follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Cyclospora Stool Test | PCR, Acid-Fast Stain, Foodborne Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyclospora-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 992,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does CYP2C19 testing measure?",
      "answer": "It looks at a gene that helps the liver process several medicines. The result is usually reported as a metabolizer phenotype that may matter for specific drug choices.",
      "pageTitle": "CYP2C19 Pharmacogenetic Test | Clopidogrel, PPIs, SSRIs, and Medication Response",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 993,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is clopidogrel the biggest use case?",
      "answer": "Clopidogrel must be activated by CYP2C19 to work well, so poor or intermediate metabolizer results can matter more than they do for many other medicines.",
      "pageTitle": "CYP2C19 Pharmacogenetic Test | Clopidogrel, PPIs, SSRIs, and Medication Response",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 994,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can proton pump inhibitors be affected too?",
      "answer": "Yes. CPIC has separate guidance for PPIs because CYP2C19 can change exposure and response for omeprazole, lansoprazole, pantoprazole, and related drugs.",
      "pageTitle": "CYP2C19 Pharmacogenetic Test | Clopidogrel, PPIs, SSRIs, and Medication Response",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 995,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can antidepressants be affected too?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressants have CPIC guidance tied to CYP2C19, so the result can matter there as well, depending on the specific medication.",
      "pageTitle": "CYP2C19 Pharmacogenetic Test | Clopidogrel, PPIs, SSRIs, and Medication Response",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 996,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a normal metabolizer result mean no medication interaction issues?",
      "answer": "No. Other genes, age, liver or kidney function, drug interactions, and dose still matter, so the phenotype is only one part of medication interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "CYP2C19 Pharmacogenetic Test | Clopidogrel, PPIs, SSRIs, and Medication Response",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 997,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should I change a medicine because of the report alone?",
      "answer": "No. The result should be matched to the exact drug, the indication, and clinician or pharmacist guidance before any medication change.",
      "pageTitle": "CYP2C19 Pharmacogenetic Test | Clopidogrel, PPIs, SSRIs, and Medication Response",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 998,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What should happen before changing clopidogrel or another drug?",
      "answer": "The result should be matched to the exact medicine, the indication, and existing FDA or CPIC guidance, and then reviewed with the prescribing clinician or pharmacist.",
      "pageTitle": "CYP2C19 Pharmacogenetic Test | Clopidogrel, PPIs, SSRIs, and Medication Response",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cyp2c19-pharmacogenetic-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 999,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does cystatin C measure?",
      "answer": "Cystatin C is a blood marker used to estimate GFR, which is one way to judge how well the kidneys are filtering blood.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystatin C Kidney Function Test | eGFR, Creatinine, CKD, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1000,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is cystatin C most useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful when creatinine-based eGFR may be less reliable, such as when muscle mass is unusually high or low or when a decision depends on a more accurate estimate.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystatin C Kidney Function Test | eGFR, Creatinine, CKD, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1001,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can cystatin C replace creatinine?",
      "answer": "No. Creatinine and cystatin C answer related but not identical questions, and the combined creatinine-cystatin C equation is often preferred when accuracy matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystatin C Kidney Function Test | eGFR, Creatinine, CKD, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1002,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What can distort cystatin C results?",
      "answer": "Non-kidney factors such as untreated thyroid disease and steroid use can affect cystatin C, so one result still needs context.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystatin C Kidney Function Test | eGFR, Creatinine, CKD, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1003,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does the combined equation matter?",
      "answer": "NIDDK says the combined creatinine-cystatin C equation is more accurate than creatinine alone and is especially helpful near important decision thresholds.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystatin C Kidney Function Test | eGFR, Creatinine, CKD, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1004,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should one abnormal result diagnose CKD?",
      "answer": "No. Kidney disease is usually judged by patterns, repeat testing, urine findings, and clinical context rather than a single abnormal marker.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystatin C Kidney Function Test | eGFR, Creatinine, CKD, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystatin-c-kidney-function-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1005,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is cysticercosis antibody testing trying to detect?",
      "answer": "It is looking for evidence of infection with larval Taenia solium, especially when neurocysticercosis is suspected.",
      "pageTitle": "Cysticercosis Antibody Testing | Neurocysticercosis, Taenia solium, EITB, Imaging, and Seizures",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1006,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is imaging still needed?",
      "answer": "Usually yes. CDC says diagnosis often requires both imaging and serology.",
      "pageTitle": "Cysticercosis Antibody Testing | Neurocysticercosis, Taenia solium, EITB, Imaging, and Seizures",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1007,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a negative test rule it out?",
      "answer": "Not always. A person with a single lesion or a calcified lesion can still have disease even if serology is negative.",
      "pageTitle": "Cysticercosis Antibody Testing | Neurocysticercosis, Taenia solium, EITB, Imaging, and Seizures",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1008,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is stool testing enough?",
      "answer": "No. Stool tests address intestinal tapeworm infection, which is a different question from cysticercosis in tissues or brain.",
      "pageTitle": "Cysticercosis Antibody Testing | Neurocysticercosis, Taenia solium, EITB, Imaging, and Seizures",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1009,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What symptoms make this more urgent?",
      "answer": "Seizures, neurologic deficits, or significant brain imaging findings need prompt medical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Cysticercosis Antibody Testing | Neurocysticercosis, Taenia solium, EITB, Imaging, and Seizures",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1010,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help interpret the result?",
      "answer": "Neurology, infectious disease, and sometimes neurosurgery or radiology help interpret antibody and imaging together.",
      "pageTitle": "Cysticercosis Antibody Testing | Neurocysticercosis, Taenia solium, EITB, Imaging, and Seizures",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cysticercosis-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1011,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is Cystoisospora part of a routine microbiome test?",
      "answer": "Usually not. It is a targeted parasite question, not a generic consumer microbiome result.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystoisospora stool testing | Cystoisosporiasis, prolonged watery diarrhea, modified acid-fast stain, PCR, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1012,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might the lab need a special request?",
      "answer": "Routine stool workups may not be optimized for Cystoisospora, so the clinician may need to ask for the specific parasite or method.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystoisospora stool testing | Cystoisosporiasis, prolonged watery diarrhea, modified acid-fast stain, PCR, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1013,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a negative stool test mean?",
      "answer": "It lowers the chance of infection, but it does not fully rule it out if collection, timing, or the method used were not ideal.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystoisospora stool testing | Cystoisosporiasis, prolonged watery diarrhea, modified acid-fast stain, PCR, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1014,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does immune status matter?",
      "answer": "Cystoisosporiasis can be more severe or prolonged in people with immune suppression, so the clinical threshold for testing and follow-up may be lower.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystoisospora stool testing | Cystoisosporiasis, prolonged watery diarrhea, modified acid-fast stain, PCR, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1015,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is TMP-SMX usually the treatment?",
      "answer": "CDC clinical guidance identifies trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole as the preferred treatment for Cystoisospora infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystoisospora stool testing | Cystoisosporiasis, prolonged watery diarrhea, modified acid-fast stain, PCR, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1016,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should stool testing be repeated after treatment?",
      "answer": "Repeat testing is usually guided by persistent symptoms, immune risk, or uncertainty about whether the original specimen and method were adequate.",
      "pageTitle": "Cystoisospora stool testing | Cystoisosporiasis, prolonged watery diarrhea, modified acid-fast stain, PCR, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/cystoisospora-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1017,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a D-dimer blood test measure?",
      "answer": "A D-dimer blood test measures a fibrin breakdown fragment that can appear when the body forms and dissolves clots. It does not show where a clot is or prove that a dangerous clot is present.",
      "pageTitle": "D-Dimer Blood Test Guide | Blood Clots, DVT, PE, False Positives, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1018,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a negative D-dimer rule out a blood clot?",
      "answer": "A negative D-dimer can help rule out DVT or pulmonary embolism only in selected low-risk or sometimes intermediate-risk situations after a clinician assesses pretest probability. It should not be used alone when the clinical risk is high.",
      "pageTitle": "D-Dimer Blood Test Guide | Blood Clots, DVT, PE, False Positives, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1019,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a high D-dimer mean I have a clot?",
      "answer": "No. A high D-dimer means clot formation and breakdown may be increased, but infection, inflammation, recent surgery, injury, pregnancy, cancer, older age, liver disease, and serious illness can also raise it.",
      "pageTitle": "D-Dimer Blood Test Guide | Blood Clots, DVT, PE, False Positives, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1020,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests may follow a high D-dimer?",
      "answer": "Follow-up depends on symptoms and risk. Possible next tests include leg vein ultrasound for suspected DVT, CT pulmonary angiography or other chest imaging for suspected pulmonary embolism, and additional clotting or inflammation tests when another condition is suspected.",
      "pageTitle": "D-Dimer Blood Test Guide | Blood Clots, DVT, PE, False Positives, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1021,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is D-dimer a good wellness screening test?",
      "answer": "D-dimer is not a general wellness screening test. Ordering it without symptoms or a clear clot question can create false alarms and may lead to unnecessary imaging or anxiety.",
      "pageTitle": "D-Dimer Blood Test Guide | Blood Clots, DVT, PE, False Positives, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/d-dimer-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1022,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is DDX41 usually inherited or acquired?",
      "answer": "DDX41 can be both. The clinically meaningful inherited question is whether a person carries a germline pathogenic variant, while tumor sequencing may also find a somatic DDX41 change in the cancer cells.",
      "pageTitle": "DDX41 Genetic Testing for Inherited Myeloid Risk | MDS, AML, Cytopenias, Family Testing, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1023,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can DDX41 disease appear in adulthood?",
      "answer": "DDX41 is unusual because inherited risk often shows up later in life, so the family history may look quiet until an adult develops MDS, AML, macrocytosis, or unexplained cytopenias.",
      "pageTitle": "DDX41 Genetic Testing for Inherited Myeloid Risk | MDS, AML, Cytopenias, Family Testing, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1024,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a DDX41 finding on tumor testing prove inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A DDX41 variant on tumor or marrow testing may be somatic or germline depending on the variant and clinical context. Germline confirmation often needs a non-blood specimen.",
      "pageTitle": "DDX41 Genetic Testing for Inherited Myeloid Risk | MDS, AML, Cytopenias, Family Testing, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1025,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why might a blood sample be a problem for confirmation?",
      "answer": "If someone already has a blood or marrow malignancy, the blood sample can contain tumor DNA. Genetics teams may use skin fibroblasts or another validated non-blood source to confirm inherited status.",
      "pageTitle": "DDX41 Genetic Testing for Inherited Myeloid Risk | MDS, AML, Cytopenias, Family Testing, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1026,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does DDX41 matter for donors and relatives?",
      "answer": "If a variant is germline, relatives may also carry it, and a related stem-cell donor could share the same predisposition. That can affect donor choice, family counseling, and who should be tested.",
      "pageTitle": "DDX41 Genetic Testing for Inherited Myeloid Risk | MDS, AML, Cytopenias, Family Testing, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1027,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What does a negative DDX41 result mean?",
      "answer": "A negative DDX41 result lowers the chance that DDX41 explains the pattern, but it does not rule out other hereditary hematologic risk genes or non-genetic causes of cytopenias, macrocytosis, or leukemia.",
      "pageTitle": "DDX41 Genetic Testing for Inherited Myeloid Risk | MDS, AML, Cytopenias, Family Testing, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ddx41-genetic-testing-inherited-myeloid-risk.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1028,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a DHEA-S test measure?",
      "answer": "It measures DHEA sulfate, an adrenal androgen that can help show whether the adrenal glands are contributing to a hormone pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "DHEA-S Test | Adrenal Androgens, PCOS, CAH, and Supplement Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1029,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a high DHEA-S mean PCOS?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. PCOS is a clinical diagnosis, and DHEA-S is only one part of the picture.",
      "pageTitle": "DHEA-S Test | Adrenal Androgens, PCOS, CAH, and Supplement Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1030,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can high DHEA-S point to congenital adrenal hyperplasia?",
      "answer": "Yes, especially when symptoms and other hormone tests fit a CAH pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "DHEA-S Test | Adrenal Androgens, PCOS, CAH, and Supplement Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1031,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do supplements matter?",
      "answer": "DHEA supplements can change lab results and may create androgenic side effects, so they can confuse interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "DHEA-S Test | Adrenal Androgens, PCOS, CAH, and Supplement Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1032,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can low DHEA-S mean adrenal insufficiency?",
      "answer": "It can, but low DHEA-S is not enough on its own; cortisol and other adrenal tests may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "DHEA-S Test | Adrenal Androgens, PCOS, CAH, and Supplement Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1033,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should be checked with DHEA-S?",
      "answer": "Testosterone, 17-hydroxyprogesterone, LH/FSH, and the symptom history are common next pieces of the puzzle.",
      "pageTitle": "DHEA-S Test | Adrenal Androgens, PCOS, CAH, and Supplement Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dhea-s-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dhea-s-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1034,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does DICER1 only matter in childhood?",
      "answer": "No. DICER1-related tumors often appear earlier in life, but adults can still be affected and may still need family-aware counseling.",
      "pageTitle": "DICER1 Syndrome Genetic Testing | Pleuropulmonary Blastoma, Thyroid Nodules, Ovarian Tumors, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1035,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a DICER1 VUS change surveillance?",
      "answer": "No. A variant of uncertain significance should not be treated like a confirmed pathogenic result.",
      "pageTitle": "DICER1 Syndrome Genetic Testing | Pleuropulmonary Blastoma, Thyroid Nodules, Ovarian Tumors, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1036,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative DICER1 result rule out the syndrome?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative result does not fully rule it out if the phenotype still fits and the test did not capture every possibility.",
      "pageTitle": "DICER1 Syndrome Genetic Testing | Pleuropulmonary Blastoma, Thyroid Nodules, Ovarian Tumors, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1037,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does tumor-only DICER1 prove inherited syndrome?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor finding can help explain the cancer, but it does not by itself prove germline DICER1 syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "DICER1 Syndrome Genetic Testing | Pleuropulmonary Blastoma, Thyroid Nodules, Ovarian Tumors, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1038,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "If a familial pathogenic DICER1 variant is known, targeted testing may be discussed for relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "DICER1 Syndrome Genetic Testing | Pleuropulmonary Blastoma, Thyroid Nodules, Ovarian Tumors, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1039,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should counseling clarify first?",
      "answer": "The exact tumor type, age at diagnosis, family history, and whether thyroid, ovarian, lung, or other DICER1-pattern findings are present.",
      "pageTitle": "DICER1 Syndrome Genetic Testing | Pleuropulmonary Blastoma, Thyroid Nodules, Ovarian Tumors, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dicer1-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1040,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Dientamoeba fragilis stool testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for evidence of Dientamoeba fragilis in stool, usually by a permanent stain, microscopy, or PCR depending on what the lab ordered. The question is not just whether the parasite exists, but whether the method used can actually detect it.",
      "pageTitle": "Dientamoeba Fragilis Stool Testing | PCR, O&P, Symptoms, Repeat Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1041,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can one stool sample be negative?",
      "answer": "Parasites may not be present in every sample, and Dientamoeba can be missed if the stool was not collected or handled the way the lab expected. Multiple specimens from different days improve the chance of detection.",
      "pageTitle": "Dientamoeba Fragilis Stool Testing | PCR, O&P, Symptoms, Repeat Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1042,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is PCR better than microscopy?",
      "answer": "PCR can be more sensitive and may identify the organism on a targeted panel, but not every panel includes Dientamoeba and a positive result still needs symptom context. Microscopy can still help when the lab uses the right permanent stain and the specimen is suitable.",
      "pageTitle": "Dientamoeba Fragilis Stool Testing | PCR, O&P, Symptoms, Repeat Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1043,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a positive result always mean treatment?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says many infections are asymptomatic and require no treatment. Treatment is usually discussed when symptoms fit and Dientamoeba is the only organism found or the clinician thinks it is the most likely explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "Dientamoeba Fragilis Stool Testing | PCR, O&P, Symptoms, Repeat Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1044,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should pinworm or other parasites be checked too?",
      "answer": "Sometimes yes. CDC notes that people with Dientamoeba can also have pinworm eggs, and the broader stool workup may need to consider other parasites, bacteria, or noninfectious causes.",
      "pageTitle": "Dientamoeba Fragilis Stool Testing | PCR, O&P, Symptoms, Repeat Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1045,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask if symptoms continue?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the original specimen was adequate, whether a repeat sample or a different method would help, whether another parasite was included on the panel, and whether the symptom pattern points to a noninfectious cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Dientamoeba Fragilis Stool Testing | PCR, O&P, Symptoms, Repeat Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dientamoeba-fragilis-stool-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1046,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does stool elastase actually test?",
      "answer": "It estimates pancreatic enzyme output and is used mainly when exocrine pancreatic insufficiency is on the table.",
      "pageTitle": "Digestive Enzyme Testing Claims | Stool Elastase, Lipase, Amylase, EPI, Supplements, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1047,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a low result always mean pancreatic disease?",
      "answer": "No. Stool quality, symptoms, and other causes of malabsorption still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Digestive Enzyme Testing Claims | Stool Elastase, Lipase, Amylase, EPI, Supplements, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1048,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can lipase or amylase diagnose all digestion problems?",
      "answer": "No. Those blood tests answer pancreatitis or related enzyme questions, not broad gut symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Digestive Enzyme Testing Claims | Stool Elastase, Lipase, Amylase, EPI, Supplements, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1049,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do supplement ads sound more certain than the lab result?",
      "answer": "Because marketing often turns a narrow pancreatic question into a general wellness promise.",
      "pageTitle": "Digestive Enzyme Testing Claims | Stool Elastase, Lipase, Amylase, EPI, Supplements, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1050,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is pancreatic enzyme replacement different from supplements?",
      "answer": "Prescription enzyme therapy is used when a clinician thinks EPI is likely; supplements are not the same thing.",
      "pageTitle": "Digestive Enzyme Testing Claims | Stool Elastase, Lipase, Amylase, EPI, Supplements, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1051,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should happen after a low stool elastase?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include nutrition labs, imaging, celiac testing, or a treatment plan based on the full picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Digestive Enzyme Testing Claims | Stool Elastase, Lipase, Amylase, EPI, Supplements, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/digestive-enzyme-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1052,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Diphyllobothrium testing help with?",
      "answer": "It helps evaluate possible broad fish tapeworm infection when fish exposure, stool findings, or B12-related clues make the question plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "Diphyllobothrium Tapeworm Testing | Broad Fish Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Proglottids, B12, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1053,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a stool test miss it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Like other stool parasite exams, more than one specimen may be needed, especially with light infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Diphyllobothrium Tapeworm Testing | Broad Fish Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Proglottids, B12, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1054,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does vitamin B12 matter?",
      "answer": "Some long-standing fish tapeworm infections can contribute to low vitamin B12 or anemia, so B12 testing may add context.",
      "pageTitle": "Diphyllobothrium Tapeworm Testing | Broad Fish Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Proglottids, B12, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1055,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What should be sent to the lab?",
      "answer": "Visible segments, eggs, or stool material should be handled according to the lab's parasite-ID instructions when available.",
      "pageTitle": "Diphyllobothrium Tapeworm Testing | Broad Fish Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Proglottids, B12, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1056,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is this the same as a microbiome report?",
      "answer": "No. This is a targeted parasite workup, not a general gut-diversity or wellness score.",
      "pageTitle": "Diphyllobothrium Tapeworm Testing | Broad Fish Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Proglottids, B12, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1057,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician can help decide whether stool identification, CBC, B12 testing, or treatment follow-up is needed next.",
      "pageTitle": "Diphyllobothrium Tapeworm Testing | Broad Fish Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Proglottids, B12, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/diphyllobothrium-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1058,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can direct-to-consumer genetic testing diagnose disease?",
      "answer": "Most direct-to-consumer genetic tests should not be treated as a diagnosis. A high-impact health result usually needs clinical confirmation and interpretation with personal and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing Guide | DNA Health Reports, Limits, and Privacy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/direct-to-consumer-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/direct-to-consumer-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/direct-to-consumer-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1059,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does GINA protect all genetic testing information?",
      "answer": "GINA protects against certain uses of genetic information in health insurance and employment, but HHS notes that it does not extend to life insurance, disability insurance, or long-term care insurance.",
      "pageTitle": "Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing Guide | DNA Health Reports, Limits, and Privacy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/direct-to-consumer-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/direct-to-consumer-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/direct-to-consumer-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1060,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are at-home lab tests as good as clinic lab tests?",
      "answer": "It depends on the test, specimen, collection method, shipping conditions, FDA review status, lab quality, and whether the result needs medical follow-up. Some home tests are useful, but home collection can add specimen and interpretation limits.",
      "pageTitle": "Doctor-Ordered vs Direct-Access vs At-Home Lab Tests | How to Choose Safely",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doctor-ordered-vs-direct-access-at-home-lab-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/doctor-ordered-vs-direct-access-at-home-lab-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doctor-ordered-vs-direct-access-at-home-lab-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1061,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is direct-access lab testing the same as medical care?",
      "answer": "No. Direct-access testing can provide data, but it does not replace a clinician who can choose the right test, interpret results with symptoms and history, and arrange treatment or urgent follow-up when needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Doctor-Ordered vs Direct-Access vs At-Home Lab Tests | How to Choose Safely",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doctor-ordered-vs-direct-access-at-home-lab-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/doctor-ordered-vs-direct-access-at-home-lab-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doctor-ordered-vs-direct-access-at-home-lab-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1062,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does doxyPEP replace regular STI testing?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says people using doxyPEP should still have regular HIV and STI screening, and follow-up visits every 3 to 6 months are part of ongoing care.",
      "pageTitle": "DoxyPEP and STI Testing | CDC Guidance, Follow-Up, and What It Does Not Cover",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1063,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What infections does doxyPEP help prevent?",
      "answer": "CDC describes doxyPEP as a strategy that can help some people reduce the chances of syphilis, chlamydia, and, in some studies, gonorrhea. It does not prevent HIV, herpes, hepatitis, or all STIs.",
      "pageTitle": "DoxyPEP and STI Testing | CDC Guidance, Follow-Up, and What It Does Not Cover",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1064,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How soon after sex should doxyPEP be taken?",
      "answer": "CDC guidance says doxycycline should be taken as soon as possible, within 72 hours after sex, and not more than once in a 24-hour period.",
      "pageTitle": "DoxyPEP and STI Testing | CDC Guidance, Follow-Up, and What It Does Not Cover",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1065,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Who should discuss doxyPEP with a clinician?",
      "answer": "CDC especially recommends discussion for gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men and transgender women who had syphilis, chlamydia, or gonorrhea in the past 12 months. Other people may discuss it through shared decision-making, but evidence is more limited.",
      "pageTitle": "DoxyPEP and STI Testing | CDC Guidance, Follow-Up, and What It Does Not Cover",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1066,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What testing happens before starting doxyPEP?",
      "answer": "CDC says initial care should include screening and treatment as indicated for STIs, usually including gonorrhea and chlamydia testing at exposed sites, syphilis blood testing, and HIV screening when relevant.",
      "pageTitle": "DoxyPEP and STI Testing | CDC Guidance, Follow-Up, and What It Does Not Cover",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1067,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What side effects or follow-up issues should I ask about?",
      "answer": "Ask about stomach upset, photosensitivity, taking doxycycline with food and water, spacing it away from dairy, antacids, iron, calcium, and magnesium, and how often to reassess whether doxyPEP is still useful.",
      "pageTitle": "DoxyPEP and STI Testing | CDC Guidance, Follow-Up, and What It Does Not Cover",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/doxy-pep-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1068,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does dysplastic neutrophils mean?",
      "answer": "It means neutrophils look abnormal under the microscope, with features such as hypogranulation, abnormal nuclear shape, or pseudo-Pelger-Huet-like forms.",
      "pageTitle": "Dysplastic neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | Pseudo-Pelger, hypogranulation, MDS, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1069,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a dysplastic-looking neutrophil automatically mean MDS?",
      "answer": "No. The finding can happen with marrow disorders, infection, medications, nutritional problems, or interpretation issues. CBC trends and the rest of the smear matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Dysplastic neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | Pseudo-Pelger, hypogranulation, MDS, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1070,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the CBC matter so much?",
      "answer": "Dysplasia is more concerning when it appears with low neutrophils, anemia, low platelets, macrocytosis, blasts, or persistent changes over time.",
      "pageTitle": "Dysplastic neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | Pseudo-Pelger, hypogranulation, MDS, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1071,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is pseudo-Pelger-Huet change?",
      "answer": "It is a neutrophil shape pattern where the nucleus looks under-segmented or unusually shaped. It can be seen in marrow disorders and some medication or reactive settings.",
      "pageTitle": "Dysplastic neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | Pseudo-Pelger, hypogranulation, MDS, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1072,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should be reviewed with the result?",
      "answer": "Prior CBCs, the smear report, symptoms, medications, alcohol use, nutrition, infection history, and whether hematology review was recommended.",
      "pageTitle": "Dysplastic neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | Pseudo-Pelger, hypogranulation, MDS, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1073,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When does this need faster follow-up?",
      "answer": "Persistent dysplasia with other cytopenias, blasts, or worsening counts usually deserves hematology review rather than watchful waiting alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Dysplastic neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | Pseudo-Pelger, hypogranulation, MDS, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/dysplastic-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1074,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Echinococcus antibody testing support?",
      "answer": "It supports a diagnosis of hydatid disease or alveolar echinococcosis when imaging and exposure history fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Echinococcus Antibody Testing | Hydatid Disease, Cysts, Imaging, Exposure, and Serology Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1075,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a stool test diagnose hydatid disease?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Human echinococcosis is usually worked up with imaging and serology, not a routine stool test.",
      "pageTitle": "Echinococcus Antibody Testing | Hydatid Disease, Cysts, Imaging, Exposure, and Serology Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1076,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative antibody test rule it out?",
      "answer": "No. Some cyst carriers do not have detectable antibodies, so the imaging pattern still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Echinococcus Antibody Testing | Hydatid Disease, Cysts, Imaging, Exposure, and Serology Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1077,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why can procedures be risky?",
      "answer": "Opening or manipulating a cyst can spread parasite material or trigger complications, so specialist planning matters before invasive procedures.",
      "pageTitle": "Echinococcus Antibody Testing | Hydatid Disease, Cysts, Imaging, Exposure, and Serology Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1078,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What exposure history matters most?",
      "answer": "Dogs, sheep, livestock, endemic travel, and cyst-like imaging findings are the big clues.",
      "pageTitle": "Echinococcus Antibody Testing | Hydatid Disease, Cysts, Imaging, Exposure, and Serology Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1079,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "Radiology, infectious disease, surgery, or hepatology may need to weigh in depending on where the cyst is and what imaging shows.",
      "pageTitle": "Echinococcus Antibody Testing | Hydatid Disease, Cysts, Imaging, Exposure, and Serology Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/echinococcus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1080,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can genetic testing diagnose hypermobile EDS?",
      "answer": "Usually not. hEDS is still mainly a clinical diagnosis, so genetic testing is often used to rule in other EDS types or other connective-tissue disorders instead.",
      "pageTitle": "Ehlers-Danlos Genetic Testing | hEDS Limits, Vascular Risk, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1081,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is EDS genetic testing most useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful when the phenotype suggests a genetically defined EDS type, especially vascular EDS, or when a known family variant can guide testing in relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "Ehlers-Danlos Genetic Testing | hEDS Limits, Vascular Risk, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1082,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What findings make vascular EDS more urgent?",
      "answer": "Arterial aneurysm or rupture, intestinal rupture, uterine rupture, very thin translucent skin, easy bruising, or a family history of vEDS make COL3A1 testing more urgent.",
      "pageTitle": "Ehlers-Danlos Genetic Testing | hEDS Limits, Vascular Risk, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1083,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative panel rule out EDS?",
      "answer": "No. A negative panel does not rule out hEDS, and it does not always rule out other heritable connective-tissue problems if the clinical picture is still strong.",
      "pageTitle": "Ehlers-Danlos Genetic Testing | hEDS Limits, Vascular Risk, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1084,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic familial variant is found, targeted testing in relatives can be useful because it may change surveillance and safety counseling.",
      "pageTitle": "Ehlers-Danlos Genetic Testing | hEDS Limits, Vascular Risk, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1085,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What else matters besides DNA testing?",
      "answer": "Clinical exam, family history, imaging when vascular risk is a concern, and sometimes cardiology or eye evaluation still matter because the phenotype drives management.",
      "pageTitle": "Ehlers-Danlos Genetic Testing | hEDS Limits, Vascular Risk, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ehlers-danlos-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1086,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an electrolyte panel measure?",
      "answer": "An electrolyte panel commonly measures sodium, potassium, chloride, and carbon dioxide/CO2, which reflects bicarbonate. These results help assess fluid balance, acid-base balance, kidney context, medicines, and illness patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "Electrolyte Panel Blood Test Guide | Sodium, Potassium, Chloride, CO2, Anion Gap, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1087,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is CO2 on an electrolyte panel the same as oxygen or lung carbon dioxide?",
      "answer": "No. CO2 on a standard blood chemistry panel usually reflects bicarbonate, an important blood buffer used to interpret acid-base balance. It is not the same as a pulse oximeter oxygen reading.",
      "pageTitle": "Electrolyte Panel Blood Test Guide | Sodium, Potassium, Chloride, CO2, Anion Gap, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1088,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the anion gap?",
      "answer": "The anion gap is a calculated value based on electrolytes, often sodium, chloride, and bicarbonate/CO2. It helps clinicians evaluate acid-base balance and possible causes of acidosis or alkalosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Electrolyte Panel Blood Test Guide | Sodium, Potassium, Chloride, CO2, Anion Gap, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1089,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can dehydration change electrolyte results?",
      "answer": "Yes. Dehydration, overhydration, vomiting, diarrhea, sweating, illness, kidney function, and medicines such as diuretics can affect sodium, potassium, chloride, and CO2/bicarbonate results.",
      "pageTitle": "Electrolyte Panel Blood Test Guide | Sodium, Potassium, Chloride, CO2, Anion Gap, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1090,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should you treat an abnormal electrolyte result yourself?",
      "answer": "Do not start potassium, salt, bicarbonate, water loading, or other electrolyte treatment based only on one lab value. Ask the ordering clinician how urgent the result is and whether repeat testing or symptoms change the next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Electrolyte Panel Blood Test Guide | Sodium, Potassium, Chloride, CO2, Anion Gap, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/electrolyte-panel-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1091,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are elliptocytes the same as ovalocytes?",
      "answer": "In many reports, yes. Labs may use the terms interchangeably or one may be more common than the other.",
      "pageTitle": "Elliptocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Ovalocytes, Iron Deficiency, Thalassemia, and Hereditary Elliptocytosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1092,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a few elliptocytes mean hereditary elliptocytosis?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Small numbers can be nonspecific; the count, CBC, and family history determine how much weight to give the finding.",
      "pageTitle": "Elliptocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Ovalocytes, Iron Deficiency, Thalassemia, and Hereditary Elliptocytosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1093,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do iron deficiency and thalassemia come up?",
      "answer": "Both can cause red-cell shape changes and low MCV, so they are common next questions when elliptocytes are seen.",
      "pageTitle": "Elliptocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Ovalocytes, Iron Deficiency, Thalassemia, and Hereditary Elliptocytosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1094,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does hereditary elliptocytosis usually mean?",
      "answer": "It is an inherited red-cell membrane disorder that can be asymptomatic or cause hemolytic anemia, especially when the smear shows many elliptocytes.",
      "pageTitle": "Elliptocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Ovalocytes, Iron Deficiency, Thalassemia, and Hereditary Elliptocytosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1095,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests often help next?",
      "answer": "Iron studies, reticulocyte count, bilirubin, LDH, haptoglobin, hemoglobin electrophoresis, and sometimes hematology review.",
      "pageTitle": "Elliptocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Ovalocytes, Iron Deficiency, Thalassemia, and Hereditary Elliptocytosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1096,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I ask about a smear review?",
      "answer": "When elliptocytes are prominent, the CBC is abnormal, or other smear shapes suggest a broader red-cell problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Elliptocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Ovalocytes, Iron Deficiency, Thalassemia, and Hereditary Elliptocytosis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/elliptocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1097,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a biomarker?",
      "answer": "FDA describes a biomarker as a defined characteristic measured as an indicator of normal biological processes, disease processes, or responses to an exposure or intervention.",
      "pageTitle": "Emerging Biomarkers Guide | How to Judge Health Optimization Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1098,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does changing a biomarker always improve health?",
      "answer": "No. A biomarker can be measurable and still not prove that changing it will improve symptoms, disease risk, quality of life, or longevity.",
      "pageTitle": "Emerging Biomarkers Guide | How to Judge Health Optimization Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1099,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What makes an emerging biomarker hard to trust?",
      "answer": "A signal can be measurable but still lack reproducibility, clinical meaning, or evidence that acting on it improves outcomes.",
      "pageTitle": "Emerging Biomarkers Guide | How to Judge Health Optimization Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1100,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Are wearable or consumer scores automatically medical tests?",
      "answer": "No. Some are wellness estimates, some are laboratory tests, and some are early research tools. The intended use matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Emerging Biomarkers Guide | How to Judge Health Optimization Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1101,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I ask before paying for one?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the number is analytically reliable, clinically meaningful, actionable, and proven to improve outcomes when acted on.",
      "pageTitle": "Emerging Biomarkers Guide | How to Judge Health Optimization Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1102,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if a test changes over time?",
      "answer": "Trend data can be useful, but a moving number still needs interpretation in context and does not automatically justify a medical decision.",
      "pageTitle": "Emerging Biomarkers Guide | How to Judge Health Optimization Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/emerging-biomarkers-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1103,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why do Entamoeba dispar and E. histolytica get confused?",
      "answer": "They can look similar on microscopy, so a report that names only the complex may not tell you whether the pathogen is actually E. histolytica.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba dispar vs histolytica testing | Stool O&P, antigen, PCR, microscopy limits, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1104,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When does species-level testing matter most?",
      "answer": "It matters most when symptoms, travel history, bloody diarrhea, or liver findings could change treatment or public-health decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba dispar vs histolytica testing | Stool O&P, antigen, PCR, microscopy limits, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1105,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is antigen or PCR more specific than microscopy?",
      "answer": "Yes, both can be more specific than microscopy for distinguishing pathogenic E. histolytica from look-alikes, depending on what the lab offers.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba dispar vs histolytica testing | Stool O&P, antigen, PCR, microscopy limits, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1106,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does a negative stool test mean?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance of active infection, but it does not fully exclude amebiasis if the specimen strategy was weak or the question was not species-specific.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba dispar vs histolytica testing | Stool O&P, antigen, PCR, microscopy limits, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1107,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can E. dispar cause disease?",
      "answer": "E. dispar is generally considered nonpathogenic, so the key concern is whether the test actually detected E. histolytica or only a look-alike group.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba dispar vs histolytica testing | Stool O&P, antigen, PCR, microscopy limits, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1108,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why are travel and exposure history important?",
      "answer": "Travel, food, water, and sexual exposures help decide whether species-level testing or extraintestinal evaluation is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba dispar vs histolytica testing | Stool O&P, antigen, PCR, microscopy limits, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-dispar-vs-histolytica-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1109,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can O&P tell E. histolytica from look-alikes?",
      "answer": "Not always. Microscopy can suggest Entamoeba, but antigen or PCR is usually better when species-level separation matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba histolytica Stool Test | O&P, Antigen, PCR, and Look-Alikes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1110,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "How many stool samples are usually needed?",
      "answer": "Often three samples collected on separate days are recommended because parasites may not be present in every stool sample.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba histolytica Stool Test | O&P, Antigen, PCR, and Look-Alikes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1111,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is serology more useful?",
      "answer": "Serology can help when extraintestinal disease such as liver abscess is suspected, but it does not always prove active intestinal infection by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba histolytica Stool Test | O&P, Antigen, PCR, and Look-Alikes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1112,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative stool test rule out amebiasis?",
      "answer": "No. Shedding can be intermittent, and the wrong test or one sample can miss the parasite.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba histolytica Stool Test | O&P, Antigen, PCR, and Look-Alikes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1113,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I seek urgent care?",
      "answer": "Blood in stool, severe pain, fever, dehydration, jaundice, or right-upper-quadrant pain can signal invasive disease and should be evaluated promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba histolytica Stool Test | O&P, Antigen, PCR, and Look-Alikes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1114,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before treatment?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the lab can distinguish E. histolytica from E. dispar, whether multiple stool samples are needed, and whether antigen, PCR, or serology should be added.",
      "pageTitle": "Entamoeba histolytica Stool Test | O&P, Antigen, PCR, and Look-Alikes",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/entamoeba-histolytica-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1115,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a parasite PCR panel actually cover?",
      "answer": "Only the organisms on that specific panel. Coverage varies by lab and order set.",
      "pageTitle": "Enteric Parasite PCR Panels | Stool Testing, O&P, Giardia, Crypto, Cyclospora, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1116,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can a negative panel still miss a parasite?",
      "answer": "The parasite may not be on the menu, the specimen may have been timed poorly, or the organism may be better found by another test.",
      "pageTitle": "Enteric Parasite PCR Panels | Stool Testing, O&P, Giardia, Crypto, Cyclospora, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1117,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is O&P still useful?",
      "answer": "When exposure history, travel, or symptoms still fit a parasite question that microscopy can answer better.",
      "pageTitle": "Enteric Parasite PCR Panels | Stool Testing, O&P, Giardia, Crypto, Cyclospora, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1118,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "How many stool samples are usually helpful?",
      "answer": "Multiple stool specimens on separate days may improve detection in parasitic disease workups.",
      "pageTitle": "Enteric Parasite PCR Panels | Stool Testing, O&P, Giardia, Crypto, Cyclospora, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1119,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should a positive panel always trigger treatment?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Symptoms, immune status, and the specific organism still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Enteric Parasite PCR Panels | Stool Testing, O&P, Giardia, Crypto, Cyclospora, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1120,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can a PCR panel detect every parasite in travel diarrhea?",
      "answer": "No. Travel history can point to parasites that need organism-specific testing or microscopy.",
      "pageTitle": "Enteric Parasite PCR Panels | Stool Testing, O&P, Giardia, Crypto, Cyclospora, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enteric-parasite-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1121,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "How soon after treatment should follow-up happen?",
      "answer": "Follow-up depends on symptoms and reinfection risk, but repeating a morning tape test is reasonable when itching or household spread continues.",
      "pageTitle": "Enterobius Pinworm Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Tape Test, Reinfection, Household Treatment, Itching, Stool Limits, and Prevention",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1122,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do households often treat everyone?",
      "answer": "Pinworm spreads easily within households, so treating close contacts and using prevention steps reduces repeat infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Enterobius Pinworm Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Tape Test, Reinfection, Household Treatment, Itching, Stool Limits, and Prevention",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1123,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a stool test confirm cure?",
      "answer": "Usually not well. Tape testing is more relevant for pinworm than routine stool testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Enterobius Pinworm Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Tape Test, Reinfection, Household Treatment, Itching, Stool Limits, and Prevention",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1124,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if symptoms continue after two rounds of treatment?",
      "answer": "That should prompt a check on collection timing, reinfection risk, and whether another diagnosis is more likely.",
      "pageTitle": "Enterobius Pinworm Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Tape Test, Reinfection, Household Treatment, Itching, Stool Limits, and Prevention",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1125,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do children and adults follow the same follow-up plan?",
      "answer": "The principles are similar, but pediatric household exposure often makes reinfection prevention especially important.",
      "pageTitle": "Enterobius Pinworm Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Tape Test, Reinfection, Household Treatment, Itching, Stool Limits, and Prevention",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1126,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician can decide whether repeat tape testing, household treatment, or a different workup is needed next.",
      "pageTitle": "Enterobius Pinworm Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Tape Test, Reinfection, Household Treatment, Itching, Stool Limits, and Prevention",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/enterobius-pinworm-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1127,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is eosinophilia?",
      "answer": "Eosinophilia means the eosinophil count is higher than expected. The absolute eosinophil count is usually more useful than the percentage alone.",
      "pageTitle": "High Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinophilia, Absolute Count, Allergies, Parasites, Asthma, Autoimmune Disease, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1128,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does the absolute eosinophil count matter?",
      "answer": "The absolute count helps show how many eosinophils are actually present, while the percentage can shift when other white blood cell types change.",
      "pageTitle": "High Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinophilia, Absolute Count, Allergies, Parasites, Asthma, Autoimmune Disease, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1129,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What are common causes of high eosinophils?",
      "answer": "Allergies, asthma, eczema, parasitic infection, drug reactions, autoimmune disease, and eosinophilic disorders are common categories.",
      "pageTitle": "High Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinophilia, Absolute Count, Allergies, Parasites, Asthma, Autoimmune Disease, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1130,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is a mild eosinophil rise always serious?",
      "answer": "Not always. Mild changes can fit allergy or exposure patterns, but persistence, symptoms, or a very high count raise the importance of follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "High Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinophilia, Absolute Count, Allergies, Parasites, Asthma, Autoimmune Disease, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1131,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should parasites be considered?",
      "answer": "Parasites become more relevant when there is travel, soil exposure, undercooked foods, animal exposure, or unexplained persistent eosinophilia.",
      "pageTitle": "High Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinophilia, Absolute Count, Allergies, Parasites, Asthma, Autoimmune Disease, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1132,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up is common?",
      "answer": "A repeat CBC with differential, review of medicines and exposures, and sometimes targeted testing for allergies, parasites, or organ involvement are common next steps.",
      "pageTitle": "High Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinophilia, Absolute Count, Allergies, Parasites, Asthma, Autoimmune Disease, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1133,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is eosinopenia?",
      "answer": "Eosinopenia means the eosinophil count is lower than expected. It is often a context clue rather than a diagnosis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinopenia, Absolute Count, Steroids, Acute Stress, Cortisol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1134,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does the absolute eosinophil count matter?",
      "answer": "The absolute count shows how many eosinophils are actually present, while the percentage can shift when other white blood cell types change.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinopenia, Absolute Count, Steroids, Acute Stress, Cortisol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1135,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What can cause low eosinophils?",
      "answer": "Steroid medicines, excess cortisol, acute stress, critical illness, alcohol intoxication, and some infection or recovery patterns can lower eosinophils.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinopenia, Absolute Count, Steroids, Acute Stress, Cortisol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1136,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is a low eosinophil count by itself a problem?",
      "answer": "Often not. A single low eosinophil result is usually less specific than the rest of the CBC, symptoms, and medication history.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinopenia, Absolute Count, Steroids, Acute Stress, Cortisol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1137,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can steroids lower eosinophils?",
      "answer": "Yes. Steroid medicines and the body's own cortisol response can lower eosinophil counts.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinopenia, Absolute Count, Steroids, Acute Stress, Cortisol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1138,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up is common?",
      "answer": "A repeat CBC, medication review, and a look at the full white blood cell differential are common next steps if the finding matters clinically.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Eosinophil Count Interpretation | Eosinopenia, Absolute Count, Steroids, Acute Stress, Cortisol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/eosinophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1139,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is EPAS1 or HIF2A?",
      "answer": "EPAS1, also called HIF2A, is a gene in the oxygen-sensing pathway. Changes in it can affect red blood cell production and can be seen in selected paraganglioma/pheochromocytoma patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "EPAS1 Genetic Testing | HIF2A, Paraganglioma, Polycythemia, Somatostatinoma, Mosaicism, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1140,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does an EPAS1 result automatically mean inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. EPAS1 findings can be germline, tumor-only, or mosaic, so the sample type and testing method matter as much as the variant itself.",
      "pageTitle": "EPAS1 Genetic Testing | HIF2A, Paraganglioma, Polycythemia, Somatostatinoma, Mosaicism, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1141,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does mosaicism mean here?",
      "answer": "Mosaicism means the variant may be present in only some tissues or only a subset of cells. That can make blood testing negative even when a tumor shows an EPAS1 change.",
      "pageTitle": "EPAS1 Genetic Testing | HIF2A, Paraganglioma, Polycythemia, Somatostatinoma, Mosaicism, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1142,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do polycythemia or somatostatinoma matter?",
      "answer": "Those features can point toward an EPAS1/HIF2A-related phenotype and can help the genetics team decide whether EPAS1 belongs in the differential.",
      "pageTitle": "EPAS1 Genetic Testing | HIF2A, Paraganglioma, Polycythemia, Somatostatinoma, Mosaicism, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1143,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should family members be tested if EPAS1 is found?",
      "answer": "Family testing depends on whether the result is germline, mosaic, or tumor-only, and on the variant classification. A genetics specialist should decide whether cascade testing makes sense.",
      "pageTitle": "EPAS1 Genetic Testing | HIF2A, Paraganglioma, Polycythemia, Somatostatinoma, Mosaicism, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1144,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up may happen after EPAS1 testing?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include confirmatory germline testing, paired tumor-normal analysis, endocrine tumor surveillance planning, and review of family history, age at diagnosis, and related findings such as polycythemia.",
      "pageTitle": "EPAS1 Genetic Testing | HIF2A, Paraganglioma, Polycythemia, Somatostatinoma, Mosaicism, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/epas1-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1145,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an ESR blood test measure?",
      "answer": "An ESR blood test measures how far red blood cells settle in a tube over one hour. Faster settling can happen when inflammation changes blood proteins and red blood cell clumping.",
      "pageTitle": "ESR Blood Test Guide | High Sed Rate, Inflammation, ESR vs CRP, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1146,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a high ESR mean?",
      "answer": "A high ESR means the result is compatible with inflammation or another factor that makes red blood cells settle faster. It can occur with infection, autoimmune or inflammatory disease, some cancers, anemia, pregnancy, kidney disease, thyroid disease, older age, and other conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "ESR Blood Test Guide | High Sed Rate, Inflammation, ESR vs CRP, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1147,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can ESR diagnose inflammation or autoimmune disease?",
      "answer": "No. ESR is a nonspecific clue. It can support a workup or help monitor a known condition, but it cannot show where inflammation is or identify the cause by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "ESR Blood Test Guide | High Sed Rate, Inflammation, ESR vs CRP, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1148,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is the difference between ESR and CRP?",
      "answer": "Both ESR and CRP are nonspecific inflammation markers. CRP often changes faster, while ESR can rise or fall more slowly and is affected by age, anemia, pregnancy, kidney disease, thyroid disease, and blood protein changes.",
      "pageTitle": "ESR Blood Test Guide | High Sed Rate, Inflammation, ESR vs CRP, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1149,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is a normal ESR reassuring?",
      "answer": "A normal ESR may make some inflammatory patterns less likely, but it does not rule out every infection, autoimmune condition, cancer, or inflammatory disease. Symptoms and other test results still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "ESR Blood Test Guide | High Sed Rate, Inflammation, ESR vs CRP, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/erythrocyte-sedimentation-rate-esr-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1150,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do estradiol and progesterone tests measure?",
      "answer": "Estradiol measures a major estrogen hormone, and progesterone measures the hormone that rises after ovulation and supports the uterine lining and pregnancy.",
      "pageTitle": "Estradiol and progesterone tests | Cycle timing, fertility, menopause, and hormone therapy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1151,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does cycle timing matter so much?",
      "answer": "These hormones rise and fall during the menstrual cycle, so the same number can mean something different depending on the day it was drawn.",
      "pageTitle": "Estradiol and progesterone tests | Cycle timing, fertility, menopause, and hormone therapy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1152,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a single hormone level diagnose fertility problems?",
      "answer": "No. Fertility questions usually need cycle timing, history, and other tests such as LH, FSH, TSH, prolactin, ultrasound, or pregnancy testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Estradiol and progesterone tests | Cycle timing, fertility, menopause, and hormone therapy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1153,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can menopause or hormone therapy change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Menopause, perimenopause, and hormone therapy can all shift estradiol and progesterone levels, which is why the clinical context matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Estradiol and progesterone tests | Cycle timing, fertility, menopause, and hormone therapy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1154,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do blood, saliva, and urine all mean the same thing?",
      "answer": "No. Test type and lab method matter, and not every specimen type is equally validated for every hormone question.",
      "pageTitle": "Estradiol and progesterone tests | Cycle timing, fertility, menopause, and hormone therapy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1155,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before testing?",
      "answer": "Ask what question is being answered, what cycle day or timing is needed, and whether medicines, pregnancy, or hormone therapy could change the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Estradiol and progesterone tests | Cycle timing, fertility, menopause, and hormone therapy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/estradiol-progesterone-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1156,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does ETV6 genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for germline ETV6 variants that can explain inherited thrombocytopenia, bleeding tendency, macrocytosis, and leukemia predisposition.",
      "pageTitle": "ETV6 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding, Macrocytosis, Leukemia Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1157,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can ETV6 families have only mild platelet changes?",
      "answer": "Yes. Platelet counts can be only mildly low, and some people are discovered because of family history or a CBC that shows thrombocytopenia plus macrocytosis.",
      "pageTitle": "ETV6 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding, Macrocytosis, Leukemia Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1158,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does macrocytosis matter?",
      "answer": "Macrocytosis can be part of the ETV6 pattern and helps distinguish an inherited platelet syndrome from an isolated acquired platelet problem.",
      "pageTitle": "ETV6 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding, Macrocytosis, Leukemia Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1159,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does an ETV6 finding on tumor testing prove inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. Tumor testing can show a change in the cancer cells, but inherited risk usually needs germline confirmation from an appropriate non-tumor specimen.",
      "pageTitle": "ETV6 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding, Macrocytosis, Leukemia Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1160,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do donor questions matter?",
      "answer": "If the variant is germline, relatives or related stem-cell donors may also carry it, which can affect transplant planning and family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "ETV6 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding, Macrocytosis, Leukemia Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1161,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if ETV6 testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance that ETV6 explains the pattern, but it does not rule out other inherited platelet genes or non-genetic causes.",
      "pageTitle": "ETV6 Genetic Testing | Inherited Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding, Macrocytosis, Leukemia Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/etv6-genetic-testing-inherited-thrombocytopenia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1162,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does euglobulin clot lysis time measure?",
      "answer": "It is a global fibrinolysis assay that estimates how quickly a clot breaks down after the euglobulin fraction of plasma has been prepared.",
      "pageTitle": "Euglobulin Clot Lysis Time Testing | Fibrinolysis, Bleeding, PAI-1, and Hyperfibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1163,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is this a routine blood test?",
      "answer": "No. It is a specialist assay and is usually used only when a clinician is actively thinking about fibrinolysis or unusual bleeding.",
      "pageTitle": "Euglobulin Clot Lysis Time Testing | Fibrinolysis, Bleeding, PAI-1, and Hyperfibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1164,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a short result suggest?",
      "answer": "A short result can fit increased clot breakdown, but it still needs clinical context and related fibrinolysis tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Euglobulin Clot Lysis Time Testing | Fibrinolysis, Bleeding, PAI-1, and Hyperfibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1165,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does a long result suggest?",
      "answer": "A long result can fit reduced fibrinolytic activity, but sample handling and method variation can also matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Euglobulin Clot Lysis Time Testing | Fibrinolysis, Bleeding, PAI-1, and Hyperfibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1166,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do clinicians order other tests too?",
      "answer": "Because ECLT does not identify one protein on its own. Follow-up may include fibrinogen, D-dimer, plasminogen, alpha-2 antiplasmin, and PAI-1 testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Euglobulin Clot Lysis Time Testing | Fibrinolysis, Bleeding, PAI-1, and Hyperfibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1167,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does normal PT and aPTT rule out a fibrinolysis problem?",
      "answer": "No. PT and aPTT tell you about clot formation, not how the clot is later broken down.",
      "pageTitle": "Euglobulin Clot Lysis Time Testing | Fibrinolysis, Bleeding, PAI-1, and Hyperfibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/euglobulin-clot-lysis-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1168,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a urine STI test miss throat or rectal infections?",
      "answer": "Yes. Urine testing mainly answers a genital or urethral testing question. CDC says people who have had oral or anal sex should talk with a healthcare provider about throat and rectal testing options.",
      "pageTitle": "Extragenital STI Testing | Throat and Rectal Swabs for Chlamydia and Gonorrhea",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/extragenital-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/extragenital-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/extragenital-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1169,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which STIs are commonly tested with throat or rectal swabs?",
      "answer": "Throat and rectal swabs are most commonly discussed for gonorrhea and chlamydia testing. Other symptoms, sores, or exposures may require different tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Extragenital STI Testing | Throat and Rectal Swabs for Chlamydia and Gonorrhea",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/extragenital-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/extragenital-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/extragenital-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1170,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is Factor V Leiden the same as Factor V deficiency?",
      "answer": "No. Factor V Leiden is a clot-risk variant; Factor V deficiency is a bleeding disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor V Leiden testing | clot risk, hormones, pregnancy, and family history",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1171,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can I have Factor V Leiden if my PT and aPTT are normal?",
      "answer": "Yes. Those routine clotting tests do not rule out Factor V Leiden.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor V Leiden testing | clot risk, hormones, pregnancy, and family history",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1172,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do I need testing before birth control or estrogen therapy?",
      "answer": "Not routinely as a population screen. Testing becomes more relevant when there is a personal clot history, a known family variant, or a specific clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor V Leiden testing | clot risk, hormones, pregnancy, and family history",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1173,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a positive test mean I need blood thinners forever?",
      "answer": "No. Anticoagulation decisions depend on the clot history, provoking factors, and overall risk profile.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor V Leiden testing | clot risk, hormones, pregnancy, and family history",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1174,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should my family be tested?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, but family testing is usually targeted and decision-based rather than automatic.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor V Leiden testing | clot risk, hormones, pregnancy, and family history",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1175,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if Factor V Leiden is negative but I still had a clot?",
      "answer": "Then other inherited or acquired causes may still be present, and the clot still needs its own explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor V Leiden testing | clot risk, hormones, pregnancy, and family history",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-v-leiden-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1176,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a factor VIII inhibitor?",
      "answer": "It is an antibody that blocks factor VIII from doing its clotting job. In hemophilia A, it can develop after treatment; in acquired hemophilia, the body can make it without prior hemophilia.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor VIII Inhibitor Testing | Acquired Hemophilia, Bethesda Assay, Factor VIII Activity, and Urgent Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1177,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is a Bethesda assay used?",
      "answer": "The Bethesda or Nijmegen-Bethesda assay measures how much inhibitor is present and helps clinicians judge how serious the inhibitor is.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor VIII Inhibitor Testing | Acquired Hemophilia, Bethesda Assay, Factor VIII Activity, and Urgent Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1178,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a low factor VIII activity result mean?",
      "answer": "It can mean factor VIII is missing, consumed, or being blocked by an inhibitor. Follow-up depends on the bleeding pattern and the rest of the coagulation workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor VIII Inhibitor Testing | Acquired Hemophilia, Bethesda Assay, Factor VIII Activity, and Urgent Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1179,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a prolonged aPTT point to this problem?",
      "answer": "Yes, but it is not specific. Heparin, lupus anticoagulant, and other factor issues can also prolong aPTT, which is why a mixing study and factor assays matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor VIII Inhibitor Testing | Acquired Hemophilia, Bethesda Assay, Factor VIII Activity, and Urgent Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1180,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can acquired hemophilia happen suddenly?",
      "answer": "Yes. It can show up in adults without a previous bleeding disorder and can cause large bruises, muscle bleeding, or postpartum bleeding.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor VIII Inhibitor Testing | Acquired Hemophilia, Bethesda Assay, Factor VIII Activity, and Urgent Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1181,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do with an urgent bleeding pattern?",
      "answer": "Get urgent medical care and ask for hematology involvement or a hemophilia treatment center, because inhibitor bleeding often needs specialized treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor VIII Inhibitor Testing | Acquired Hemophilia, Bethesda Assay, Factor VIII Activity, and Urgent Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-viii-inhibitor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1182,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does factor XIII activity testing measure?",
      "answer": "It measures whether factor XIII is active enough to stabilize a clot after the earlier clotting steps have already happened.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor XIII Activity Testing | Rare Bleeding, Normal PT/aPTT, Wound Healing, and FXIII Deficiency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1183,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can factor XIII deficiency happen with normal PT and aPTT?",
      "answer": "Yes. Normal screening tests do not rule out factor XIII deficiency because the factor acts after the standard clotting assays have already ended.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor XIII Activity Testing | Rare Bleeding, Normal PT/aPTT, Wound Healing, and FXIII Deficiency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1184,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What symptoms make factor XIII deficiency more likely?",
      "answer": "Delayed bleeding after surgery or trauma, poor wound healing, umbilical stump bleeding, heavy menstrual bleeding, and recurrent pregnancy loss are classic clues.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor XIII Activity Testing | Rare Bleeding, Normal PT/aPTT, Wound Healing, and FXIII Deficiency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1185,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is factor XIII deficiency inherited or acquired?",
      "answer": "Both. Inherited deficiency is rare and usually due to F13A1 or F13B variants; acquired low activity can occur later from autoimmune, inflammatory, liver, cancer, or treatment-related causes.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor XIII Activity Testing | Rare Bleeding, Normal PT/aPTT, Wound Healing, and FXIII Deficiency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1186,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up tests are common?",
      "answer": "Clinicians may order factor XIII antigen testing, genetic testing, inhibitor evaluation, liver testing, or a broader bleeding workup depending on the story.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor XIII Activity Testing | Rare Bleeding, Normal PT/aPTT, Wound Healing, and FXIII Deficiency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1187,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is this a general screening test?",
      "answer": "No. It is usually ordered when bleeding, wound healing, pregnancy loss, or a specific rare-factor question makes factor XIII a good fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Factor XIII Activity Testing | Rare Bleeding, Normal PT/aPTT, Wound Healing, and FXIII Deficiency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/factor-xiii-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1188,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does FH genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for pathogenic variants that can explain inherited familial hypercholesterolemia. The goal is to identify a genetic cause for the LDL pattern and to guide family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Familial Hypercholesterolemia Genetic Testing | FH, LDL, Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1189,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative FH test rule out inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result does not always rule out inherited high LDL risk or a clinical FH pattern, especially when the untreated cholesterol history is strong.",
      "pageTitle": "Familial Hypercholesterolemia Genetic Testing | FH, LDL, Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1190,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is family testing useful if a variant is found?",
      "answer": "Targeted testing for the known family variant can help relatives find risk earlier and decide who needs lipid follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Familial Hypercholesterolemia Genetic Testing | FH, LDL, Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1191,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "How does genetic testing differ from clinical criteria?",
      "answer": "Clinical criteria use LDL levels, family history, and physical findings. Genetic testing looks for a known disease-causing variant. They answer related but not identical questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Familial Hypercholesterolemia Genetic Testing | FH, LDL, Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1192,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should children be checked for FH?",
      "answer": "Children in affected families may need lipid screening or targeted testing because early identification can change prevention and treatment timing.",
      "pageTitle": "Familial Hypercholesterolemia Genetic Testing | FH, LDL, Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1193,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should explain the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician, lipid specialist, or genetic counselor can help combine the report with LDL levels, family history, and treatment decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Familial Hypercholesterolemia Genetic Testing | FH, LDL, Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-hypercholesterolemia-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1194,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a negative test rule out a family aortic problem?",
      "answer": "No. A negative panel does not eliminate familial risk or remove the need for imaging in the right family.",
      "pageTitle": "Thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection genetic testing | imaging, family screening, and variant interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1195,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do relatives need testing if I have a pathogenic variant?",
      "answer": "Often targeted cascade testing is the next step, along with imaging when appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "Thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection genetic testing | imaging, family screening, and variant interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1196,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What if the result is a VUS?",
      "answer": "A VUS should not be treated as a confirmed explanation without more evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection genetic testing | imaging, family screening, and variant interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1197,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does imaging still matter if the gene test is positive?",
      "answer": "Yes. Aortic size, growth rate, symptoms, and anatomy still drive management.",
      "pageTitle": "Thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection genetic testing | imaging, family screening, and variant interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1198,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who is this test most useful for?",
      "answer": "People with thoracic aneurysm or dissection at younger ages, syndromic features, or a family pattern of aortic disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection genetic testing | imaging, family screening, and variant interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1199,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is this a casual wellness screen?",
      "answer": "No. It is most useful when it changes surveillance, prevention, or family screening.",
      "pageTitle": "Thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection genetic testing | imaging, family screening, and variant interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/familial-thoracic-aortic-aneurysm-dissection-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1200,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Fasciola antibody testing help with?",
      "answer": "It can support diagnosis of fascioliasis, especially before stool eggs appear.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasciola Antibody Testing | Fascioliasis, Liver Fluke, Serology, Stool Eggs, Eosinophils, and Watercress Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1201,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can stool testing be negative early on?",
      "answer": "Yes. Stool eggs may not appear until later, so an early negative stool exam does not end the workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasciola Antibody Testing | Fascioliasis, Liver Fluke, Serology, Stool Eggs, Eosinophils, and Watercress Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1202,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is watercress important?",
      "answer": "Watercress and other aquatic plants can carry infective stages when grown in contaminated water.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasciola Antibody Testing | Fascioliasis, Liver Fluke, Serology, Stool Eggs, Eosinophils, and Watercress Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1203,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can eosinophils help?",
      "answer": "Yes, eosinophilia can support the suspicion, but it is not specific to Fasciola.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasciola Antibody Testing | Fascioliasis, Liver Fluke, Serology, Stool Eggs, Eosinophils, and Watercress Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1204,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a positive antibody prove active disease?",
      "answer": "No. It is supportive, but active disease still has to be interpreted with symptoms, imaging, and stool studies.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasciola Antibody Testing | Fascioliasis, Liver Fluke, Serology, Stool Eggs, Eosinophils, and Watercress Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1205,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help interpret it?",
      "answer": "Infectious disease or public-health input can help interpret the result, especially when treatment access or confirmation is uncertain.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasciola Antibody Testing | Fascioliasis, Liver Fluke, Serology, Stool Eggs, Eosinophils, and Watercress Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasciola-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1206,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "How long do you usually fast before a blood test?",
      "answer": "MedlinePlus says fasting usually lasts 8 to 12 hours before a test, but the exact timing depends on the test and your clinician or lab instructions.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting for Blood Tests Guide | Water, Coffee, Medicines, Glucose, Lipids, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1207,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can you drink water while fasting for a blood test?",
      "answer": "Plain water is usually allowed during fasting unless your clinician or lab gives different instructions. Avoid coffee, tea, juice, milk, alcohol, and other drinks unless your instructions specifically allow them.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting for Blood Tests Guide | Water, Coffee, Medicines, Glucose, Lipids, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1208,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should you stop medicines or supplements before fasting labs?",
      "answer": "Do not stop prescription medicines, diabetes medicines, insulin, or supplements unless the ordering clinician tells you to. Ask ahead of time because some medicines can affect test results or fasting safety.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting for Blood Tests Guide | Water, Coffee, Medicines, Glucose, Lipids, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1209,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if you accidentally eat before a fasting blood test?",
      "answer": "Tell the lab and the clinician who ordered the test before the result is interpreted. Depending on the test and what you ate or drank, they may still draw the sample, mark it as nonfasting, or reschedule.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting for Blood Tests Guide | Water, Coffee, Medicines, Glucose, Lipids, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-blood-test-preparation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1210,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a fasting insulin test measure?",
      "answer": "It measures how much insulin is circulating after fasting. The result only becomes useful when paired with glucose, symptoms, medications, and the clinical question being asked.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting Insulin Test Guide | Insulin Resistance, C-Peptide, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1211,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is fasting insulin used to diagnose diabetes?",
      "answer": "No. Prediabetes and diabetes are usually identified with glucose-based testing such as fasting plasma glucose, A1C, or an oral glucose tolerance test.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting Insulin Test Guide | Insulin Resistance, C-Peptide, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1212,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do people order C-peptide too?",
      "answer": "C-peptide often gives a clearer picture of how much insulin the pancreas is making, because it stays in blood longer and is less affected by outside insulin treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting Insulin Test Guide | Insulin Resistance, C-Peptide, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1213,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a high fasting insulin mean insulin resistance?",
      "answer": "It can, but not by itself. A clinician needs to look at glucose, A1C, symptoms, and risk factors before deciding what the number means.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting Insulin Test Guide | Insulin Resistance, C-Peptide, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1214,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What can distort the result?",
      "answer": "Fasting length, recent meals, exercise, illness, poor sleep, stress, medications, and laboratory reference ranges can all change interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting Insulin Test Guide | Insulin Resistance, C-Peptide, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1215,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before using this for optimization?",
      "answer": "Ask what decision the test is meant to change, whether glucose or A1C should be checked too, and what evidence-based next step would follow from an abnormal result.",
      "pageTitle": "Fasting Insulin Test Guide | Insulin Resistance, C-Peptide, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fasting-insulin-insulin-resistance-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1216,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is FDA-authorized the same as clinically useful?",
      "answer": "No. Authorization means the FDA reviewed the test’s stated claims, but usefulness still depends on the question you are trying to answer.",
      "pageTitle": "FDA-Authorized Genetic Tests | What Authorization Covers, What It Doesn't, and How to Read the Label",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1217,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative DTC result rule out inherited disease risk?",
      "answer": "No. Most consumer tests cover only a subset of possible variants, so a negative result does not erase family-history risk.",
      "pageTitle": "FDA-Authorized Genetic Tests | What Authorization Covers, What It Doesn't, and How to Read the Label",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1218,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a DTC genetic result diagnose disease?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Many results are informational and may need clinical confirmation if they are going to drive care.",
      "pageTitle": "FDA-Authorized Genetic Tests | What Authorization Covers, What It Doesn't, and How to Read the Label",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1219,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does the FDA talk differently about carrier, health-risk, and pharmacogenetic tests?",
      "answer": "Because they answer different questions and carry different evidence and regulatory requirements.",
      "pageTitle": "FDA-Authorized Genetic Tests | What Authorization Covers, What It Doesn't, and How to Read the Label",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1220,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I share raw DNA files with third-party services?",
      "answer": "Only if you are comfortable with privacy, quality, and confirmation limits, because those interpretations may not be FDA reviewed.",
      "pageTitle": "FDA-Authorized Genetic Tests | What Authorization Covers, What It Doesn't, and How to Read the Label",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1221,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is a clinician especially useful?",
      "answer": "When the result could change cancer screening, medication choice, pregnancy planning, or family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "FDA-Authorized Genetic Tests | What Authorization Covers, What It Doesn't, and How to Read the Label",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fda-authorized-genetic-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1222,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high fecal calprotectin mean?",
      "answer": "A higher result suggests intestinal inflammation, but it does not say exactly why the inflammation is there.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin Test | Inflammation Marker, IBD vs IBS, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1223,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can fecal calprotectin distinguish IBD from IBS?",
      "answer": "It helps separate inflammatory from non-inflammatory patterns, but it does not diagnose Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin Test | Inflammation Marker, IBD vs IBS, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1224,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What can raise calprotectin besides IBD?",
      "answer": "Infection, NSAID use, other inflammatory gut conditions, and some cancers can raise stool calprotectin.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin Test | Inflammation Marker, IBD vs IBS, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1225,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do doctors care about the number?",
      "answer": "The degree of elevation helps decide whether more testing, repeat testing, medication review, or endoscopy is more appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin Test | Inflammation Marker, IBD vs IBS, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1226,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is repeat testing useful?",
      "answer": "Repeat testing can help when the result is borderline, when medications or infection may have distorted the first sample, or when symptoms change.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin Test | Inflammation Marker, IBD vs IBS, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1227,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a normal result rule out every gut problem?",
      "answer": "No. It lowers the chance of active intestinal inflammation, but symptoms can still come from IBS, reflux, food intolerance, infection, or another cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin Test | Inflammation Marker, IBD vs IBS, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1228,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Which is better, calprotectin or lactoferrin?",
      "answer": "Neither one is universally better. They both point toward intestinal inflammation, and the right choice often depends on the lab, local practice, and what the clinician is trying to answer.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin vs Lactoferrin | Stool Inflammation Tests and IBD",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1229,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can these tests tell IBD from IBS?",
      "answer": "They can help separate inflammatory from non-inflammatory patterns, but they do not diagnose IBD or IBS on their own.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin vs Lactoferrin | Stool Inflammation Tests and IBD",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1230,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is calprotectin used more often?",
      "answer": "Calprotectin has broader availability and more published guidance in many settings, so clinicians often reach for it first.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin vs Lactoferrin | Stool Inflammation Tests and IBD",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1231,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can infection or NSAIDs change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Infection, NSAID use, and other inflammatory gut conditions can raise stool inflammatory markers.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin vs Lactoferrin | Stool Inflammation Tests and IBD",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1232,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should the result trigger faster GI follow-up?",
      "answer": "Very high or rising results, blood in stool, weight loss, fever, nighttime diarrhea, anemia, or strong family history should prompt faster follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin vs Lactoferrin | Stool Inflammation Tests and IBD",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1233,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a normal result rule out bowel disease?",
      "answer": "No. It lowers the chance of active intestinal inflammation, but it does not rule out every digestive disease or every reason for symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Calprotectin vs Lactoferrin | Stool Inflammation Tests and IBD",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-calprotectin-vs-lactoferrin.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1234,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive fecal fat test mean?",
      "answer": "It suggests fat may not be absorbed normally, but the cause still has to be worked out.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Fat Test | Stool Fat, Malabsorption, Steatorrhea, and 72-Hour Collection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1235,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is the 72-hour collection so annoying?",
      "answer": "Because it is meant to measure output over time, and missed samples or diet changes can distort the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Fat Test | Stool Fat, Malabsorption, Steatorrhea, and 72-Hour Collection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1236,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can celiac disease or pancreatic insufficiency both cause this?",
      "answer": "Yes. Both can lead to fat malabsorption and may need separate follow-up tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Fat Test | Stool Fat, Malabsorption, Steatorrhea, and 72-Hour Collection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1237,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does watery diarrhea make the test harder to interpret?",
      "answer": "It can, because stool consistency and collection quality affect the reliability of the measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Fat Test | Stool Fat, Malabsorption, Steatorrhea, and 72-Hour Collection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1238,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is a fecal fat test the same as fecal elastase?",
      "answer": "No. Fecal fat looks for malabsorption of fat, while elastase estimates pancreatic enzyme output.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Fat Test | Stool Fat, Malabsorption, Steatorrhea, and 72-Hour Collection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1239,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What comes after an abnormal result?",
      "answer": "Follow-up often includes pancreatic, celiac, bile acid, infection, or nutritional evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Fat Test | Stool Fat, Malabsorption, Steatorrhea, and 72-Hour Collection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-fat-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-fat-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1240,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the difference between FOBT and FIT?",
      "answer": "FOBT is the older umbrella term for stool blood testing, while FIT specifically uses antibodies to detect human hemoglobin.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Occult Blood and FIT Tests | Stool Blood Screening, FIT-DNA, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1241,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive stool blood test mean cancer?",
      "answer": "No. It means blood or another concerning signal was detected and a colonoscopy is usually needed to find the cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Occult Blood and FIT Tests | Stool Blood Screening, FIT-DNA, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1242,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How often should FIT be repeated if it is negative?",
      "answer": "When FIT is used for screening, it is repeated on a schedule rather than used once and forgotten.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Occult Blood and FIT Tests | Stool Blood Screening, FIT-DNA, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1243,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Who should not rely on stool testing alone?",
      "answer": "People with symptoms, prior polyps, inflammatory bowel disease, strong family history, or other high-risk factors may need a different strategy.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Occult Blood and FIT Tests | Stool Blood Screening, FIT-DNA, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1244,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can medicines or foods affect stool blood tests?",
      "answer": "Some guaiac FOBT kits can be affected by diet or medicines, so the kit instructions matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Occult Blood and FIT Tests | Stool Blood Screening, FIT-DNA, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1245,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why is colonoscopy the next step after a positive result?",
      "answer": "Because screening is not complete until the colon is actually examined and the bleeding source is found or excluded.",
      "pageTitle": "Fecal Occult Blood and FIT Tests | Stool Blood Screening, FIT-DNA, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fecal-occult-blood-fit-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1246,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does ferritin measure?",
      "answer": "Ferritin is a protein that stores iron. A ferritin blood test can help show how much iron is stored in the body, but it should be interpreted with symptoms, CBC results, inflammation, liver context, and other iron tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Ferritin and Iron Studies Guide | Low Iron, High Ferritin, TIBC, and Transferrin Saturation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1247,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why are ferritin and iron studies interpreted together?",
      "answer": "Serum iron, transferrin or TIBC, transferrin saturation, ferritin, and CBC markers answer different parts of the iron story. One marker alone may miss inflammation, iron deficiency, iron overload, or anemia context.",
      "pageTitle": "Ferritin and Iron Studies Guide | Low Iron, High Ferritin, TIBC, and Transferrin Saturation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1248,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can ferritin be high without iron overload?",
      "answer": "Yes. Ferritin can rise with inflammation, infection, liver disease, and other conditions. High ferritin needs iron saturation, liver markers, symptoms, history, and sometimes hemochromatosis-focused follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Ferritin and Iron Studies Guide | Low Iron, High Ferritin, TIBC, and Transferrin Saturation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1249,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should you take iron if ferritin is low?",
      "answer": "Do not start or change iron treatment based only on one value. NHLBI notes that iron supplements are generally not given to people who do not have iron-deficiency anemia because too much iron can damage organs.",
      "pageTitle": "Ferritin and Iron Studies Guide | Low Iron, High Ferritin, TIBC, and Transferrin Saturation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ferritin-iron-studies.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1250,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can FH be diagnosed without genetic testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. FH can be diagnosed clinically from untreated LDL levels, family history, and physical findings even if DNA testing is unavailable or negative.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Clinical Criteria vs Genetic Testing | LDL, Family History, and Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1251,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do LDL levels still matter if genetic testing is done?",
      "answer": "LDL levels show the actual cholesterol burden that drives treatment intensity and family follow-up, so the cholesterol pattern still carries real weight.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Clinical Criteria vs Genetic Testing | LDL, Family History, and Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1252,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a negative FH genetic test mean?",
      "answer": "It means no disease-causing variant was found on that test, but it does not always rule out inherited high LDL risk or a clinical FH pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Clinical Criteria vs Genetic Testing | LDL, Family History, and Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1253,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is cascade screening?",
      "answer": "Cascade screening means checking relatives of a person with FH by cholesterol testing, genetic testing, or both so more family members can be found early.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Clinical Criteria vs Genetic Testing | LDL, Family History, and Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1254,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Which relatives are usually checked first?",
      "answer": "First-degree relatives such as parents, siblings, and children are usually the first group considered for cholesterol screening or targeted family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Clinical Criteria vs Genetic Testing | LDL, Family History, and Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1255,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician, lipid specialist, or genetic counselor can help combine the LDL pattern, family history, and genetic result into one risk picture.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Clinical Criteria vs Genetic Testing | LDL, Family History, and Cascade Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-clinical-criteria-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1256,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is FH mostly about kidney cancer?",
      "answer": "FH can be important for kidney cancer risk, but it is also tied to cutaneous and uterine leiomyomas, so the full pattern matters.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Fumarate Hydratase Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | HLRCC, Kidney Cancer, Leiomyomas, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1257,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a FH VUS change care?",
      "answer": "No. A variant of uncertain significance should not be treated like a confirmed FH pathogenic variant.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Fumarate Hydratase Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | HLRCC, Kidney Cancer, Leiomyomas, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1258,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative FH result rule out HLRCC?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative result does not fully rule it out if the clinical picture still fits the syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Fumarate Hydratase Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | HLRCC, Kidney Cancer, Leiomyomas, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1259,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does tumor-only FH prove inherited syndrome?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only FH finding can support tumor interpretation but does not by itself prove inherited predisposition.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Fumarate Hydratase Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | HLRCC, Kidney Cancer, Leiomyomas, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1260,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "If a familial pathogenic FH variant is known, relatives may be offered targeted testing.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Fumarate Hydratase Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | HLRCC, Kidney Cancer, Leiomyomas, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1261,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should counseling clarify first?",
      "answer": "The exact variant, kidney imaging history, leiomyoma history, and whether the report was from germline or tumor tissue.",
      "pageTitle": "FH Fumarate Hydratase Tumor Predisposition Genetic Testing | HLRCC, Kidney Cancer, Leiomyomas, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fh-fumarate-hydratase-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1262,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is fibrinogen?",
      "answer": "Fibrinogen is clotting factor I, a liver-made protein that helps form a stable blood clot.",
      "pageTitle": "Fibrinogen Blood Test | Clotting Factor I, Bleeding, DIC, Inflammation, and Liver Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1263,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is a fibrinogen blood test ordered?",
      "answer": "It may be ordered during bleeding workups, abnormal PT or aPTT evaluation, suspected DIC, liver disease assessment, or other clotting evaluations.",
      "pageTitle": "Fibrinogen Blood Test | Clotting Factor I, Bleeding, DIC, Inflammation, and Liver Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1264,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does low fibrinogen mean?",
      "answer": "Low fibrinogen can fit with consumption of clotting factors, liver production problems, massive bleeding, or rare inherited fibrinogen disorders.",
      "pageTitle": "Fibrinogen Blood Test | Clotting Factor I, Bleeding, DIC, Inflammation, and Liver Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1265,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does high fibrinogen mean?",
      "answer": "High fibrinogen can reflect inflammation or other acute-phase responses, so it is not interpreted in isolation.",
      "pageTitle": "Fibrinogen Blood Test | Clotting Factor I, Bleeding, DIC, Inflammation, and Liver Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1266,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests usually go with fibrinogen?",
      "answer": "Common companion tests include PT/INR, aPTT, platelet count, D-dimer, liver tests, and sometimes thrombin time or specialized factor testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Fibrinogen Blood Test | Clotting Factor I, Bleeding, DIC, Inflammation, and Liver Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1267,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is fibrinogen more concerning?",
      "answer": "It is more concerning when it is very low, unexpectedly high in a sick patient, or abnormal along with bleeding, thrombosis, liver dysfunction, or DIC features.",
      "pageTitle": "Fibrinogen Blood Test | Clotting Factor I, Bleeding, DIC, Inflammation, and Liver Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fibrinogen-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1268,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a filaria antibody test usually tell you?",
      "answer": "It suggests exposure or infection with a filarial parasite, but it often cannot identify the exact species.",
      "pageTitle": "Filaria Antibody Testing | Filarial Worms, Loiasis, Onchocerciasis, Lymphatic Filariasis, and Cross-Reactivity",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1269,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does geography matter?",
      "answer": "Different filarial species are associated with different regions and exposures, which changes which confirmatory test is most useful.",
      "pageTitle": "Filaria Antibody Testing | Filarial Worms, Loiasis, Onchocerciasis, Lymphatic Filariasis, and Cross-Reactivity",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1270,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is Loa loa important to exclude?",
      "answer": "Some treatments for other filarial infections can be dangerous if Loa loa is present at high levels.",
      "pageTitle": "Filaria Antibody Testing | Filarial Worms, Loiasis, Onchocerciasis, Lymphatic Filariasis, and Cross-Reactivity",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1271,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can eosinophils help?",
      "answer": "Yes. Eosinophilia can support suspicion, but it does not identify the species by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Filaria Antibody Testing | Filarial Worms, Loiasis, Onchocerciasis, Lymphatic Filariasis, and Cross-Reactivity",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1272,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why might a positive antibody not mean active disease?",
      "answer": "Antibodies can persist after exposure, so the result has to be combined with symptoms and other tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Filaria Antibody Testing | Filarial Worms, Loiasis, Onchocerciasis, Lymphatic Filariasis, and Cross-Reactivity",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1273,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help interpret it?",
      "answer": "Infectious disease or tropical medicine specialists often help choose the right smear, skin snip, antigen test, or referral lab.",
      "pageTitle": "Filaria Antibody Testing | Filarial Worms, Loiasis, Onchocerciasis, Lymphatic Filariasis, and Cross-Reactivity",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/filaria-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1274,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is food sensitivity testing the same as food allergy testing?",
      "answer": "No. Food allergy evaluation uses symptoms plus appropriate tests such as IgE blood testing, skin prick testing, and sometimes a supervised oral food challenge. Many food sensitivity panels rely on IgG, which allergy organizations do not recommend for diagnosing food allergy or intolerance.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Sensitivity Tests vs Allergy Tests | IgG, IgE, and What Results Mean",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1275,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a positive IgG food panel mean?",
      "answer": "By itself, it does not prove allergy or intolerance. A positive result can reflect exposure and not a problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Sensitivity Tests vs Allergy Tests | IgG, IgE, and What Results Mean",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1276,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a food allergy blood test be normal even if I react?",
      "answer": "Sometimes. Test results need to be interpreted with the symptom story, timing, and sometimes a supervised challenge.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Sensitivity Tests vs Allergy Tests | IgG, IgE, and What Results Mean",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1277,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What symptoms mean I should get urgent care?",
      "answer": "Hives, swelling, throat tightness, wheezing, faintness, repeated vomiting, or other signs of an immediate reaction need urgent medical attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Sensitivity Tests vs Allergy Tests | IgG, IgE, and What Results Mean",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1278,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I cut out many foods based on a panel?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Broad panels can lead to unnecessary restriction, stress, and nutritional problems, especially when they are not tied to a clear diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Sensitivity Tests vs Allergy Tests | IgG, IgE, and What Results Mean",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1279,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should celiac disease be considered?",
      "answer": "If gluten seems to be involved, celiac testing needs its own pathway and should be discussed with a clinician before you start gluten avoidance if possible.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Sensitivity Tests vs Allergy Tests | IgG, IgE, and What Results Mean",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-sensitivity-tests-vs-allergy-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1280,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can food contaminant panels tell me which food made me sick?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Results may show exposure context, but they do not reliably pinpoint one food or one meal.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Toxin and Contaminant Panel Claims | Metals, Mycotoxins, PFAS, Pesticides",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1281,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a detectable contaminant the same as a harmful exposure?",
      "answer": "No. Detectability alone does not prove a clinical problem, and many contaminants can appear at low levels without immediate illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Toxin and Contaminant Panel Claims | Metals, Mycotoxins, PFAS, Pesticides",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1282,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How is human biomonitoring different from food testing?",
      "answer": "Human biomonitoring looks at chemicals or metabolites in the body, while food testing measures the food itself. They answer different questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Toxin and Contaminant Panel Claims | Metals, Mycotoxins, PFAS, Pesticides",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1283,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is a food contaminant result more useful?",
      "answer": "It is more useful when there is a defined exposure concern, like a recall, water issue, workplace exposure, or a specific food pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Toxin and Contaminant Panel Claims | Metals, Mycotoxins, PFAS, Pesticides",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1284,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I buy detox supplements because of a panel?",
      "answer": "Not based on a broad panel alone. Exposure reduction and clinician follow-up are more defensible than blanket detox claims.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Toxin and Contaminant Panel Claims | Metals, Mycotoxins, PFAS, Pesticides",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1285,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What makes a claim stronger?",
      "answer": "A stronger claim would specify the contaminant, specimen, exposure window, validated method, and the action that should change if the result is abnormal.",
      "pageTitle": "Food Toxin and Contaminant Panel Claims | Metals, Mycotoxins, PFAS, Pesticides",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/food-toxin-contaminant-panel-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1286,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Where can I find free or low-cost STI testing?",
      "answer": "CDC's GetTested locator, HIV.gov's services locator, local health departments, community health centers, family planning clinics, and Title X clinics can help people find confidential free or low-cost STI and HIV testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Free and Low-Cost STI Testing | Where to Find Confidential Testing in the US",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/free-low-cost-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/free-low-cost-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/free-low-cost-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1287,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do free STI testing sites test for every STI?",
      "answer": "Not always. Testing menus vary by clinic, funding, symptoms, age, pregnancy, exposure site, and local risk. Ask which infections and body sites are covered before you rely on a result.",
      "pageTitle": "Free and Low-Cost STI Testing | Where to Find Confidential Testing in the US",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/free-low-cost-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/free-low-cost-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/free-low-cost-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1288,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive fructose breath test prove intolerance?",
      "answer": "It supports malabsorption, but the symptom pattern and the amount tested still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Fructose Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Fructose Malabsorption, IBS, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1289,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might methane matter?",
      "answer": "Some people make more methane than hydrogen, and a hydrogen-only approach can miss part of the signal.",
      "pageTitle": "Fructose Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Fructose Malabsorption, IBS, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1290,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can SIBO make the test hard to interpret?",
      "answer": "Yes. Bacterial overgrowth or fast transit can create early gas changes that muddy the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Fructose Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Fructose Malabsorption, IBS, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1291,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is hereditary fructose intolerance the same thing?",
      "answer": "No. Hereditary fructose intolerance is a rare genetic disorder and is different from common dietary fructose malabsorption.",
      "pageTitle": "Fructose Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Fructose Malabsorption, IBS, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1292,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I use the test to decide on a FODMAP diet?",
      "answer": "It can help frame a diet question, but it should not replace symptom-guided diet work with a clinician or dietitian.",
      "pageTitle": "Fructose Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Fructose Malabsorption, IBS, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1293,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is retesting worth considering?",
      "answer": "If the preparation was poor or the clinical picture changed, a repeat test may be more useful than overreading one imperfect result.",
      "pageTitle": "Fructose Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Fructose Malabsorption, IBS, and Prep",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fructose-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fructose-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1294,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do FSH and LH measure?",
      "answer": "FSH and LH are pituitary hormones that help regulate ovulation, sperm production, puberty, and sex-hormone signaling.",
      "pageTitle": "FSH and LH tests | Fertility, menopause, puberty, and pituitary questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1295,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does cycle timing matter for these tests?",
      "answer": "In people who menstruate, FSH and LH vary across the cycle, so the same value can mean something different depending on when the blood was drawn.",
      "pageTitle": "FSH and LH tests | Fertility, menopause, puberty, and pituitary questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1296,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can FSH and LH diagnose infertility by themselves?",
      "answer": "No. They are usually part of a bigger evaluation that may include estradiol, progesterone, prolactin, thyroid tests, ultrasound, or semen analysis.",
      "pageTitle": "FSH and LH tests | Fertility, menopause, puberty, and pituitary questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1297,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What can high FSH suggest?",
      "answer": "High FSH can point toward ovarian failure or menopause in women, or testicular dysfunction in men, but the result still needs clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "FSH and LH tests | Fertility, menopause, puberty, and pituitary questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1298,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What can low FSH or LH suggest?",
      "answer": "Low values can suggest pituitary or hypothalamic signaling problems, but medications, illness, weight loss, and hormone use can also affect the result.",
      "pageTitle": "FSH and LH tests | Fertility, menopause, puberty, and pituitary questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1299,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can home ovulation tests replace FSH or LH blood tests?",
      "answer": "No. Home LH tests can help time ovulation, but they are not a substitute for a medical interpretation of hormone patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "FSH and LH tests | Fertility, menopause, puberty, and pituitary questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/fsh-lh-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1300,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is there one standard full STI panel?",
      "answer": "No. Full STI panel is not a single standardized medical panel. Clinics and labs may use the phrase differently, so ask which infections, body sites, and test types are included.",
      "pageTitle": "Full STI Panel | What Tests Are Included and What Can Be Missing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/full-sti-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/full-sti-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/full-sti-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1301,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might a full STI panel miss an infection?",
      "answer": "A panel can miss an infection if it does not include the right infection, the right body site, the right timing after exposure, or the right follow-up test for symptoms or a positive result.",
      "pageTitle": "Full STI Panel | What Tests Are Included and What Can Be Missing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/full-sti-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/full-sti-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/full-sti-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1302,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a G6PD test measure?",
      "answer": "A G6PD test looks for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency. Enzyme activity testing shows whether red blood cells have enough working enzyme, while genetic testing looks for variants in the G6PD gene.",
      "pageTitle": "G6PD Test | Enzyme Activity, Genetic Testing, Hemolytic Triggers, Newborn Jaundice, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1303,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is the enzyme test or the genetic test more useful?",
      "answer": "Often both help, but enzyme activity is the most direct clinical test for current red-cell function. Genetic testing can add inherited-risk information, especially for family questions or when the clinical picture is complicated.",
      "pageTitle": "G6PD Test | Enzyme Activity, Genetic Testing, Hemolytic Triggers, Newborn Jaundice, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1304,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can recent hemolysis change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. During or soon after acute hemolysis, the enzyme test can look less abnormal than expected because older red cells have already been destroyed. Timing after recovery may matter.",
      "pageTitle": "G6PD Test | Enzyme Activity, Genetic Testing, Hemolytic Triggers, Newborn Jaundice, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1305,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does newborn timing matter?",
      "answer": "Newborn jaundice and newborn testing need age-specific interpretation. A baby's age in hours, gestational age, feeding, and bilirubin trend all matter, and newborn hemolysis can require urgent pediatric follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "G6PD Test | Enzyme Activity, Genetic Testing, Hemolytic Triggers, Newborn Jaundice, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1306,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What triggers are common?",
      "answer": "Common triggers include certain infections, fava beans, and some medicines. Dark urine, jaundice, fatigue, shortness of breath, and sudden anemia after a trigger can point toward hemolysis.",
      "pageTitle": "G6PD Test | Enzyme Activity, Genetic Testing, Hemolytic Triggers, Newborn Jaundice, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1307,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "Relatives may need counseling or testing when there is a family history of hemolysis, known G6PD deficiency, or newborn jaundice. The exact approach depends on sex, ancestry, symptoms, and the clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "G6PD Test | Enzyme Activity, Genetic Testing, Hemolytic Triggers, Newborn Jaundice, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/g6pd-test-genetic-enzyme.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1308,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does GATA2 deficiency test for?",
      "answer": "It looks for germline GATA2 variants that can cause immune problems, low monocytes or other blood-count changes, lymphedema, HPV-related disease, and risk for MDS or AML.",
      "pageTitle": "GATA2 Deficiency Genetic Testing | MDS, AML, Immunodeficiency, HPV, Monocytopenia, and Donor Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1309,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is GATA2 deficiency inherited?",
      "answer": "It can be inherited or arise de novo. Either way, the clinically important finding is a germline pathogenic variant that affects blood and immune cells.",
      "pageTitle": "GATA2 Deficiency Genetic Testing | MDS, AML, Immunodeficiency, HPV, Monocytopenia, and Donor Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1310,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the lab method matter?",
      "answer": "Some GATA2 pathogenic variants are coding changes, but others may involve deletion/duplication or regulatory regions, so the testing strategy should match the clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "GATA2 Deficiency Genetic Testing | MDS, AML, Immunodeficiency, HPV, Monocytopenia, and Donor Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1311,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can tumor testing prove GATA2 deficiency?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Tumor sequencing may raise suspicion, but a true inherited diagnosis usually needs germline testing from an appropriate specimen.",
      "pageTitle": "GATA2 Deficiency Genetic Testing | MDS, AML, Immunodeficiency, HPV, Monocytopenia, and Donor Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1312,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do donor and family questions matter?",
      "answer": "A germline result can change which relatives should be tested and whether a related stem-cell donor is suitable.",
      "pageTitle": "GATA2 Deficiency Genetic Testing | MDS, AML, Immunodeficiency, HPV, Monocytopenia, and Donor Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1313,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if GATA2 testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance that GATA2 explains the pattern, but it does not rule out other hereditary myeloid-risk genes or non-genetic causes.",
      "pageTitle": "GATA2 Deficiency Genetic Testing | MDS, AML, Immunodeficiency, HPV, Monocytopenia, and Donor Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gata2-deficiency-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1314,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "When is genetic counseling most useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful when a result could change screening, surgery, medication, pregnancy planning, or family communication.",
      "pageTitle": "When to Use a Genetic Counselor | DNA Test Results, Family Risk, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1315,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do I need counseling before testing or after?",
      "answer": "Both can help: before testing to choose the right test and the right person, and after testing to understand the result and next steps.",
      "pageTitle": "When to Use a Genetic Counselor | DNA Test Results, Family Risk, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1316,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Who in the family should test first?",
      "answer": "When possible, the person with the strongest clinical history or known diagnosis is usually the most informative person to test first.",
      "pageTitle": "When to Use a Genetic Counselor | DNA Test Results, Family Risk, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1317,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can counseling help with direct-to-consumer results?",
      "answer": "Yes. Counselors can help decide whether the result needs confirmation and whether the report changes care or just curiosity.",
      "pageTitle": "When to Use a Genetic Counselor | DNA Test Results, Family Risk, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1318,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a counselor order the test?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, but not always. They often help choose the right test and coordinate with the right clinician or lab.",
      "pageTitle": "When to Use a Genetic Counselor | DNA Test Results, Family Risk, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1319,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if I just want help understanding the report?",
      "answer": "That is a common reason to seek counseling, especially if the report uses unfamiliar terms such as VUS, carrier, or risk score.",
      "pageTitle": "When to Use a Genetic Counselor | DNA Test Results, Family Risk, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-counselor-when-to-use-one.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1320,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Who should be tested first in a family?",
      "answer": "Usually the person with the clearest diagnosis or the strongest symptoms should be tested first, because that gives the best chance of finding the family variant.",
      "pageTitle": "Inherited heart disease genetic testing | family history, cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia, and FH",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1321,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out inherited heart disease?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result can still leave inherited risk on the table, especially when the family history and heart testing are strongly suggestive.",
      "pageTitle": "Inherited heart disease genetic testing | family history, cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia, and FH",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1322,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a variant of uncertain significance mean?",
      "answer": "It means the lab found a DNA change, but it is not yet clear whether it explains the condition. It usually should not be used alone to make major decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Inherited heart disease genetic testing | family history, cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia, and FH",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1323,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does family history matter so much?",
      "answer": "CDC notes that family health history helps identify inherited conditions that may show up before symptoms are obvious, and it guides who might need counseling or testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Inherited heart disease genetic testing | family history, cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia, and FH",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1324,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is this the same as polygenic risk scoring?",
      "answer": "No. The page here is about inherited disease testing and family variants, not a risk score built from many small DNA effects.",
      "pageTitle": "Inherited heart disease genetic testing | family history, cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia, and FH",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1325,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should relatives still get heart screening if the genetic test is negative?",
      "answer": "Sometimes yes. If the family pattern is strong, clinical screening can still be useful even when no variant is found.",
      "pageTitle": "Inherited heart disease genetic testing | family history, cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia, and FH",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/genetic-testing-hereditary-heart-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1326,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a GGT blood test measure?",
      "answer": "A GGT blood test measures gamma-glutamyl transferase, an enzyme found in many tissues but commonly interpreted as part of liver and bile-duct evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "GGT Blood Test Guide | High GGT, Liver, Bile Ducts, ALP, Alcohol, and Liver Panel Patterns",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1327,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What can cause high GGT?",
      "answer": "High GGT can occur with liver disease, bile-duct blockage or irritation, alcohol use, some medicines or supplements, metabolic liver disease, and other liver or biliary conditions. It does not identify the cause by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "GGT Blood Test Guide | High GGT, Liver, Bile Ducts, ALP, Alcohol, and Liver Panel Patterns",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1328,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is GGT checked with alkaline phosphatase?",
      "answer": "ALP can rise from liver, bile duct, bone, pregnancy, growth, or healing fracture sources. A high GGT with high ALP makes a liver or bile-duct source more likely, while a normal GGT with high ALP may push the discussion toward non-liver sources.",
      "pageTitle": "GGT Blood Test Guide | High GGT, Liver, Bile Ducts, ALP, Alcohol, and Liver Panel Patterns",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1329,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does high GGT prove alcohol-related liver disease?",
      "answer": "No. GGT can rise with alcohol use, but it is not specific enough to prove alcohol-related liver disease. The pattern with AST, ALT, bilirubin, ALP, symptoms, history, medicines, and repeat testing matters.",
      "pageTitle": "GGT Blood Test Guide | High GGT, Liver, Bile Ducts, ALP, Alcohol, and Liver Panel Patterns",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1330,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is GGT a detox or wellness marker?",
      "answer": "GGT should not be used as a standalone detox score. It is most useful when interpreted with a reason for testing, other liver-panel results, medication and alcohol context, and clinical follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "GGT Blood Test Guide | High GGT, Liver, Bile Ducts, ALP, Alcohol, and Liver Panel Patterns",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ggt-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ggt-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1331,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR result always mean the organism caused my symptoms?",
      "answer": "No. PCR can detect colonization, shedding, or nonviable material, so the symptom pattern still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "GI Pathogen Panel Stool Test | PCR Panels, Diarrhea, Ova and Parasites, and Culture",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1332,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is a stool culture still needed?",
      "answer": "Culture matters when susceptibility testing, public health investigation, or organism recovery is needed after a panel result.",
      "pageTitle": "GI Pathogen Panel Stool Test | PCR Panels, Diarrhea, Ova and Parasites, and Culture",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1333,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should formed stool be tested on a GI panel?",
      "answer": "Usually not unless the clinical question specifically calls for it. Testing is most useful when diarrhea is active.",
      "pageTitle": "GI Pathogen Panel Stool Test | PCR Panels, Diarrhea, Ova and Parasites, and Culture",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1334,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if my panel is negative but I still have diarrhea?",
      "answer": "It may mean the cause was not on the panel, the sample was mistimed, or the cause is noninfectious.",
      "pageTitle": "GI Pathogen Panel Stool Test | PCR Panels, Diarrhea, Ova and Parasites, and Culture",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1335,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "How does travel change the workup?",
      "answer": "Travel can widen the differential and make parasite testing or follow-up evaluation more important.",
      "pageTitle": "GI Pathogen Panel Stool Test | PCR Panels, Diarrhea, Ova and Parasites, and Culture",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1336,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a panel replace stool culture in every case?",
      "answer": "No. Panels and cultures answer overlapping but different questions, and the best choice depends on what follow-up would change.",
      "pageTitle": "GI Pathogen Panel Stool Test | PCR Panels, Diarrhea, Ova and Parasites, and Culture",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gi-pathogen-panel-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1337,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does one negative stool sample rule out Giardia?",
      "answer": "No. Giardia can be missed if the sample is mistimed or the organism is not being shed that day.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia Antigen Test | Stool Testing, PCR Panels, O&P, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1338,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might CDC recommend three samples?",
      "answer": "Because multiple stool samples improve the chance of detection over several days.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia Antigen Test | Stool Testing, PCR Panels, O&P, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1339,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is antigen testing better than O&P?",
      "answer": "Often, yes, for Giardia specifically, because antigen methods can be more sensitive than microscopy.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia Antigen Test | Stool Testing, PCR Panels, O&P, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1340,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a PCR panel replace Giardia-specific testing?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, but panel content varies and the result still needs clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia Antigen Test | Stool Testing, PCR Panels, O&P, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1341,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should retesting happen after treatment?",
      "answer": "Usually only if symptoms continue after treatment or the first workup was not adequate.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia Antigen Test | Stool Testing, PCR Panels, O&P, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1342,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can pets or household spread matter?",
      "answer": "Yes. Exposure history can help explain why Giardia remains on the differential.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia Antigen Test | Stool Testing, PCR Panels, O&P, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1343,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if travel diarrhea looks broader than Giardia?",
      "answer": "A wider stool workup or a noninfectious diarrhea evaluation may fit better if the exposure story suggests more than one possible cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia Antigen Test | Stool Testing, PCR Panels, O&P, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-antigen-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1344,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should I repeat a Giardia test after treatment?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends retesting only if symptoms continue after treatment is complete. If you are clearly improving, a routine test-of-cure often does not add much.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia treatment follow-up testing | Persistent symptoms, repeat stool tests, reinfection, and antigen vs PCR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1345,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which follow-up test is most useful: antigen, PCR, or O&P?",
      "answer": "It depends on the clinical question and the lab's method. Antigen and PCR can be more sensitive for Giardia than microscopy, while an ova and parasite exam may be used when the clinician wants a broader parasite look.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia treatment follow-up testing | Persistent symptoms, repeat stool tests, reinfection, and antigen vs PCR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1346,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why might Giardia keep showing up after treatment?",
      "answer": "Persistent positivity can reflect incomplete treatment, reinfection, intermittent shedding, or a test collected too soon. Exposure history and symptom timing matter as much as the result itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia treatment follow-up testing | Persistent symptoms, repeat stool tests, reinfection, and antigen vs PCR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1347,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can household members or childcare exposure cause reinfection?",
      "answer": "Yes. Giardia spreads easily through contaminated hands, surfaces, water, food, and close contact, so ongoing exposure in a household or childcare setting can make it look like treatment failed.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia treatment follow-up testing | Persistent symptoms, repeat stool tests, reinfection, and antigen vs PCR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1348,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if symptoms are gone but a test is still positive?",
      "answer": "If symptoms are gone, the key question is whether the result would change anything. A positive follow-up test without symptoms may not mean active disease, and the reason for retesting should be clear before ordering it.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia treatment follow-up testing | Persistent symptoms, repeat stool tests, reinfection, and antigen vs PCR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1349,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I think beyond Giardia?",
      "answer": "If symptoms persist despite appropriate treatment or the story does not fit Giardia, other causes like another parasite, post-infectious IBS, celiac disease, or a noninfectious GI problem should be considered.",
      "pageTitle": "Giardia treatment follow-up testing | Persistent symptoms, repeat stool tests, reinfection, and antigen vs PCR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/giardia-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1350,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Gnathostoma antibody testing help with?",
      "answer": "It can support a suspected gnathostomiasis diagnosis in someone with compatible exposures and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Gnathostoma Antibody Testing | Gnathostomiasis, Migratory Swelling, Eosinophils, Raw Fish, and CDC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1351,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is the test widely available in the United States?",
      "answer": "No. CDC notes serologic tests are not available at CDC or elsewhere in the U.S. in a routine way.",
      "pageTitle": "Gnathostoma Antibody Testing | Gnathostomiasis, Migratory Swelling, Eosinophils, Raw Fish, and CDC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1352,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do eosinophils matter?",
      "answer": "Eosinophilia can support the diagnosis, but it is not specific and needs the exposure history and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Gnathostoma Antibody Testing | Gnathostomiasis, Migratory Swelling, Eosinophils, Raw Fish, and CDC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1353,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can it diagnose brain or eye disease on its own?",
      "answer": "No. Neurologic or ocular symptoms need urgent specialist evaluation and often imaging.",
      "pageTitle": "Gnathostoma Antibody Testing | Gnathostomiasis, Migratory Swelling, Eosinophils, Raw Fish, and CDC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1354,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What foods are relevant?",
      "answer": "Raw or undercooked freshwater fish, eel, frog, poultry, or other hosts in endemic settings can matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Gnathostoma Antibody Testing | Gnathostomiasis, Migratory Swelling, Eosinophils, Raw Fish, and CDC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1355,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret it?",
      "answer": "Infectious disease or tropical medicine clinicians are usually the right people to help interpret this rare test.",
      "pageTitle": "Gnathostoma Antibody Testing | Gnathostomiasis, Migratory Swelling, Eosinophils, Raw Fish, and CDC Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gnathostoma-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1356,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a gut diversity score diagnose disease?",
      "answer": "No. A gut diversity score is a summary metric, not a diagnosis. It can be interesting for education or trend tracking, but it does not tell you by itself whether you have IBS, inflammation, infection, celiac disease, or another condition.",
      "pageTitle": "Gut Diversity Score Interpretation | Microbiome Reports, Meaning, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1357,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a higher diversity score always better?",
      "answer": "Not always. Diversity is only one part of the report, and more diversity does not automatically mean better symptoms, better health, or lower disease risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Gut Diversity Score Interpretation | Microbiome Reports, Meaning, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1358,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why can my score change between tests?",
      "answer": "Diet, antibiotics, illness, travel, bowel habits, sample timing, shipping, and the company’s database or algorithm can all change the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Gut Diversity Score Interpretation | Microbiome Reports, Meaning, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1359,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can I compare scores across different companies?",
      "answer": "Usually not very well. Different labs may use different methods, reference groups, and scoring formulas, so a number from one company may not equal a number from another.",
      "pageTitle": "Gut Diversity Score Interpretation | Microbiome Reports, Meaning, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1360,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is retesting useful?",
      "answer": "Retesting is most useful when you are tracking a specific change and the same lab is using the same method over time. Without a decision tied to the repeat result, retesting can just measure normal variation.",
      "pageTitle": "Gut Diversity Score Interpretation | Microbiome Reports, Meaning, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1361,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should symptoms matter more than the score?",
      "answer": "If you have persistent diarrhea, blood in the stool, weight loss, fever, dehydration, severe pain, or symptoms that are worsening, a medical stool test or clinician-directed evaluation matters more than a diversity score.",
      "pageTitle": "Gut Diversity Score Interpretation | Microbiome Reports, Meaning, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/gut-diversity-score.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/gut-diversity-score.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1362,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Which H. pylori test is best?",
      "answer": "For active infection, the breath test and stool antigen test are usually the main noninvasive choices. Blood antibody tests are much less useful for current infection.",
      "pageTitle": "H. pylori Testing | Breath Test, Stool Antigen, Blood Test, Endoscopy, and Test-of-Cure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1363,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can blood tests tell if H. pylori is gone?",
      "answer": "No. Blood antibody tests can stay positive after the infection has cleared, so they are not used to prove cure.",
      "pageTitle": "H. pylori Testing | Breath Test, Stool Antigen, Blood Test, Endoscopy, and Test-of-Cure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1364,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How long should I stop acid suppressors before testing?",
      "answer": "Ask the ordering clinician, but PPIs are commonly held for 1 to 2 weeks before a test-of-cure, and antibiotics or bismuth may also need to be stopped earlier.",
      "pageTitle": "H. pylori Testing | Breath Test, Stool Antigen, Blood Test, Endoscopy, and Test-of-Cure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1365,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why would a doctor choose endoscopy instead of a breath or stool test?",
      "answer": "Endoscopy is more useful when there are alarm symptoms, bleeding, ulcer concerns, or a need to directly inspect and biopsy the stomach lining.",
      "pageTitle": "H. pylori Testing | Breath Test, Stool Antigen, Blood Test, Endoscopy, and Test-of-Cure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1366,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I repeat testing after treatment?",
      "answer": "Usually at least 4 weeks after antibiotics are finished, with PPIs held long enough that the bacteria are not artificially suppressed.",
      "pageTitle": "H. pylori Testing | Breath Test, Stool Antigen, Blood Test, Endoscopy, and Test-of-Cure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1367,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Do symptoms alone prove H. pylori?",
      "answer": "No. Dyspepsia, reflux, nausea, or bloating can have many causes, so test choice and follow-up matter.",
      "pageTitle": "H. pylori Testing | Breath Test, Stool Antigen, Blood Test, Endoscopy, and Test-of-Cure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/h-pylori-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/h-pylori-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1368,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is hair analysis so controversial?",
      "answer": "Because contamination and weak reference standards make it hard to know what a result really means for one person.",
      "pageTitle": "Hair Mineral Analysis Claims | Heavy Metals, Nutrients, Detox, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1369,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can hair analysis detect heavy metal exposure?",
      "answer": "It may show a signal in some settings, but blood or urine testing is usually more clinically grounded.",
      "pageTitle": "Hair Mineral Analysis Claims | Heavy Metals, Nutrients, Detox, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1370,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can it diagnose nutrient deficiency?",
      "answer": "Not reliably. Hair levels do not map cleanly onto body nutrient status.",
      "pageTitle": "Hair Mineral Analysis Claims | Heavy Metals, Nutrients, Detox, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1371,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does hair treatment matter?",
      "answer": "Dye, bleach, shampoo, and environmental dust can all change the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Hair Mineral Analysis Claims | Heavy Metals, Nutrients, Detox, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1372,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What test often works better for metals?",
      "answer": "A targeted blood or urine test that matches the exposure question is usually stronger.",
      "pageTitle": "Hair Mineral Analysis Claims | Heavy Metals, Nutrients, Detox, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1373,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before paying for it?",
      "answer": "Ask what exact decision the result will change, and whether the lab can justify that claim with evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Hair Mineral Analysis Claims | Heavy Metals, Nutrients, Detox, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hair-mineral-analysis-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1374,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a wearable alert prove AFib?",
      "answer": "No. It is a useful prompt, but a clinician still needs to review the rhythm and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Heart Rhythm Alerts and ECG Wearables | AFib, False Positives, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1375,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What if I feel palpitations but the watch shows nothing?",
      "answer": "The watch can miss episodes. Symptoms still matter and may warrant medical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Heart Rhythm Alerts and ECG Wearables | AFib, False Positives, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1376,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should I trust the ECG strip on its own?",
      "answer": "It can help, but it does not replace a full rhythm evaluation or a 12-lead ECG when needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Heart Rhythm Alerts and ECG Wearables | AFib, False Positives, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1377,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What should I share with my clinician?",
      "answer": "Share the alert history, ECG strip, symptom timing, medication list, and any stroke-risk factors.",
      "pageTitle": "Heart Rhythm Alerts and ECG Wearables | AFib, False Positives, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1378,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can sleep apnea or thyroid problems matter?",
      "answer": "Yes. Those can affect rhythm and may be part of the follow-up workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Heart Rhythm Alerts and ECG Wearables | AFib, False Positives, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1379,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is urgent care better than watchful waiting?",
      "answer": "Chest pain, fainting, stroke symptoms, severe shortness of breath, or a sustained very abnormal heart rate need prompt care.",
      "pageTitle": "Heart Rhythm Alerts and ECG Wearables | AFib, False Positives, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/heart-rhythm-alerts-ecg-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1380,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does hemoglobin electrophoresis measure?",
      "answer": "It separates hemoglobin types in blood so a lab can see whether common or abnormal hemoglobins are present and in what proportions.",
      "pageTitle": "Hemoglobin Electrophoresis and Thalassemia | Sickle Trait, Carrier Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1381,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can it tell sickle trait from sickle cell disease?",
      "answer": "Usually yes. The pattern of hemoglobin types helps distinguish a carrier state from disease, though the rest of the clinical picture still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Hemoglobin Electrophoresis and Thalassemia | Sickle Trait, Carrier Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1382,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can it diagnose thalassemia?",
      "answer": "It can support the diagnosis, especially for beta thalassemia patterns, but clinicians often pair it with CBC indices, iron studies, and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "Hemoglobin Electrophoresis and Thalassemia | Sickle Trait, Carrier Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1383,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a normal result rule out alpha thalassemia?",
      "answer": "Not always. Some alpha thalassemia situations need genetic testing or a broader workup, especially if the CBC still looks suspicious.",
      "pageTitle": "Hemoglobin Electrophoresis and Thalassemia | Sickle Trait, Carrier Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1384,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does a recent transfusion matter?",
      "answer": "Donor red cells can change what the test sees, so a recent transfusion may make the result harder to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "Hemoglobin Electrophoresis and Thalassemia | Sickle Trait, Carrier Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1385,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should carrier screening or genetic counseling enter the picture?",
      "answer": "That matters most when pregnancy planning, a family history, a newborn screen, or a complex hemoglobin pattern raises the chance of passing on a disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Hemoglobin Electrophoresis and Thalassemia | Sickle Trait, Carrier Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hemoglobin-electrophoresis-thalassemia.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1386,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is there one blood test for hepatitis A, B, and C?",
      "answer": "A hepatitis panel may use one blood draw, but hepatitis A, B, and C require different markers. HAV IgM, the hepatitis B triple panel, and HCV antibody with RNA follow-up answer different questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis A, B, and C Blood Tests | HAV IgM, HBV Triple Panel, HCV Antibody and RNA",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1387,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a positive hepatitis A total antibody mean?",
      "answer": "A positive total anti-HAV or IgG anti-HAV result usually means past infection or vaccination. Acute hepatitis A is usually evaluated with IgM anti-HAV, interpreted with symptoms and exposure history.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis A, B, and C Blood Tests | HAV IgM, HBV Triple Panel, HCV Antibody and RNA",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1388,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the hepatitis B triple panel?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends a hepatitis B triple panel for adults who have never been screened. It includes HBsAg, anti-HBs, and total anti-HBc to help identify current infection, past infection, vaccination immunity, or susceptibility.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis A, B, and C Blood Tests | HAV IgM, HBV Triple Panel, HCV Antibody and RNA",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1389,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a positive hepatitis C antibody mean current infection?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. CDC says a reactive HCV antibody shows past or current infection and should be followed automatically by HCV RNA testing to determine whether current infection is present.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis A, B, and C Blood Tests | HAV IgM, HBV Triple Panel, HCV Antibody and RNA",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1390,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can hepatitis tests be negative soon after exposure?",
      "answer": "Yes. Timing matters. Early after exposure, antibodies or viral markers may not yet be detectable, and repeat or RNA-based testing may be needed depending on the virus, exposure, symptoms, and clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis A, B, and C Blood Tests | HAV IgM, HBV Triple Panel, HCV Antibody and RNA",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1391,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Do high ALT or AST levels prove viral hepatitis?",
      "answer": "No. ALT and AST can show liver-cell injury, but they do not identify the cause. Viral hepatitis testing, medication review, alcohol history, metabolic risk, bilirubin, INR, symptoms, and imaging may all affect follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis A, B, and C Blood Tests | HAV IgM, HBV Triple Panel, HCV Antibody and RNA",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-a-b-c-blood-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1392,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are hepatitis B and C part of every STI panel?",
      "answer": "No. Full STI panel is not standardized, and hepatitis B or C may or may not be included. Ask which hepatitis tests are included by name.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis B and C Testing in STI Panels | Blood Tests, Vaccines, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-c-testing-sti.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-b-c-testing-sti.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-c-testing-sti.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1393,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the difference between hepatitis B and hepatitis C testing?",
      "answer": "Hepatitis B screening commonly uses a triple panel that helps identify current infection, past infection, or vaccine-related immunity. Hepatitis C testing starts with an antibody test and uses HCV RNA testing to confirm current infection after a reactive antibody result.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis B and C Testing in STI Panels | Blood Tests, Vaccines, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-c-testing-sti.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-b-c-testing-sti.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-c-testing-sti.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1394,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does anti-HBs measure?",
      "answer": "Anti-HBs measures antibody to hepatitis B surface antigen. It can indicate immunity after vaccination or after past infection, depending on the rest of the hepatitis B panel.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis B surface antibody after vaccination | Anti-HBs, immunity, and retesting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1395,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What anti-HBs level suggests protection?",
      "answer": "In CDC guidance, anti-HBs of 10 mIU/mL or higher is commonly used as the threshold for vaccine response in settings where post-vaccination testing is recommended.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis B surface antibody after vaccination | Anti-HBs, immunity, and retesting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1396,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why can anti-HBs be negative years after vaccination?",
      "answer": "The measurable antibody can wane over time even when immune memory remains. A negative result years later does not always mean the vaccine never worked.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis B surface antibody after vaccination | Anti-HBs, immunity, and retesting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1397,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does the triple panel matter?",
      "answer": "The triple panel adds HBsAg and total anti-HBc, which helps distinguish current infection, past infection, vaccine-only immunity, and susceptibility.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis B surface antibody after vaccination | Anti-HBs, immunity, and retesting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1398,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who usually needs post-vaccination testing?",
      "answer": "CDC uses post-vaccination serology for specific groups such as some health care personnel, dialysis patients, and infants with perinatal HBV exposure, depending on the situation.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis B surface antibody after vaccination | Anti-HBs, immunity, and retesting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1399,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should I repeat the test after vaccination?",
      "answer": "If post-vaccination testing is recommended, CDC commonly advises checking anti-HBs about 1 to 2 months after the final vaccine dose.",
      "pageTitle": "Hepatitis B surface antibody after vaccination | Anti-HBs, immunity, and retesting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hepatitis-b-surface-antibody-after-vaccination.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1400,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do I need a broad panel if I already have a long QT diagnosis?",
      "answer": "Often the clinical question comes first, and the test should be matched to the syndrome rather than ordered as a generic screen.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary arrhythmia panel testing | Long QT, Brugada, CPVT, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1401,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a negative panel rule out an inherited arrhythmia?",
      "answer": "No. Some people have a clinical diagnosis even when panel testing is negative.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary arrhythmia panel testing | Long QT, Brugada, CPVT, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1402,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What if the result is a VUS?",
      "answer": "A VUS is not a confirmed disease-causing answer and should not be treated as one without more evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary arrhythmia panel testing | Long QT, Brugada, CPVT, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1403,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should relatives get tested automatically?",
      "answer": "Usually only after a pathogenic familial variant is identified or a cardiology/genetics team recommends targeted screening.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary arrhythmia panel testing | Long QT, Brugada, CPVT, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1404,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can the panel tell me if a medication is safe?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Medication safety still depends on the syndrome, ECG findings, symptoms, and clinician guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary arrhythmia panel testing | Long QT, Brugada, CPVT, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1405,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why not just use a consumer DNA report?",
      "answer": "Because clinical arrhythmia interpretation needs variant curation, phenotype matching, and family follow-up that consumer reports often do not provide.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary arrhythmia panel testing | Long QT, Brugada, CPVT, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-arrhythmia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1406,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Who is hereditary cancer genetic testing for?",
      "answer": "People with a strong family history, a personal cancer history, certain ancestry-related risk patterns, or an abnormal tumor test may be candidates.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cancer Genetic Testing | BRCA, Lynch Syndrome, Family History, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1407,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is BRCA testing the same as hereditary cancer testing?",
      "answer": "No. BRCA testing is one common type of hereditary cancer testing, but other genes and syndromes can matter too, including Lynch syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cancer Genetic Testing | BRCA, Lynch Syndrome, Family History, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1408,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should the affected relative be tested first?",
      "answer": "Usually yes when possible, because testing an affected relative often gives a clearer answer for the family.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cancer Genetic Testing | BRCA, Lynch Syndrome, Family History, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1409,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does a VUS mean?",
      "answer": "A variant of uncertain significance is a DNA change whose cancer-risk meaning is not yet clear, so it usually should not drive major medical decisions by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cancer Genetic Testing | BRCA, Lynch Syndrome, Family History, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1410,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do negative results rule out inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result can still leave family-history risk, testing-panel gaps, or variants not covered by the assay.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cancer Genetic Testing | BRCA, Lynch Syndrome, Family History, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1411,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is genetic counseling most useful?",
      "answer": "Counseling is most useful when the result could change screening, surgery, medication decisions, pregnancy planning, or family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cancer Genetic Testing | BRCA, Lynch Syndrome, Family History, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cancer-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1412,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does hereditary cardiomyopathy testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for variants linked to inherited heart muscle disease, most often in sarcomere genes for HCM and in other cardiomyopathy genes when the phenotype suggests DCM or ARVC.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cardiomyopathy Genetic Testing | HCM, DCM, ARVC, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1413,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out inherited cardiomyopathy?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result does not always rule it out, because not every causal variant is detectable and some families still need imaging-based screening.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cardiomyopathy Genetic Testing | HCM, DCM, ARVC, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1414,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Which relatives usually matter most?",
      "answer": "First-degree relatives usually matter most, because a known familial variant can guide targeted testing and heart surveillance.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cardiomyopathy Genetic Testing | HCM, DCM, ARVC, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1415,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is HCM the only inherited cardiomyopathy?",
      "answer": "No. HCM is the best known, but DCM and ARVC can also have important inherited causes, and the gene panel should match the heart pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cardiomyopathy Genetic Testing | HCM, DCM, ARVC, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1416,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What testing happens alongside DNA testing?",
      "answer": "ECG, echocardiogram, and sometimes cardiac MRI or rhythm monitoring are often part of the workup because DNA does not replace the heart exam.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cardiomyopathy Genetic Testing | HCM, DCM, ARVC, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1417,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When does a VUS matter?",
      "answer": "A variant of uncertain significance should be interpreted cautiously and usually should not drive major treatment decisions without more evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Cardiomyopathy Genetic Testing | HCM, DCM, ARVC, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-cardiomyopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1418,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does hemochromatosis genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for HFE variants, especially C282Y and H63D patterns, that can explain inherited iron overload risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Hemochromatosis Genetic Testing | HFE, Iron Overload, Ferritin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1419,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does C282Y homozygosity always mean disease?",
      "answer": "No. It raises the chance of HFE-related hemochromatosis, but not everyone with the genotype develops organ damage or needs the same follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Hemochromatosis Genetic Testing | HFE, Iron Overload, Ferritin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1420,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is transferrin saturation important?",
      "answer": "Transferrin saturation can be an early clue that too much iron is being absorbed. It is usually interpreted together with ferritin and the clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Hemochromatosis Genetic Testing | HFE, Iron Overload, Ferritin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1421,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can ferritin be high for reasons other than hemochromatosis?",
      "answer": "Yes. Ferritin can rise with inflammation, liver disease, alcohol use, infection, and metabolic disease, so it is not specific for iron overload.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Hemochromatosis Genetic Testing | HFE, Iron Overload, Ferritin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1422,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is family testing useful?",
      "answer": "Family testing is useful when a family variant is known or when relatives need to decide whether iron studies or genetic testing should come next.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Hemochromatosis Genetic Testing | HFE, Iron Overload, Ferritin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1423,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the genetic test is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance of HFE-related hemochromatosis, but it does not fully explain away abnormal ferritin or transferrin saturation if the iron pattern is strong.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Hemochromatosis Genetic Testing | HFE, Iron Overload, Ferritin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-hemochromatosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1424,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What kidney findings make genetic testing more useful?",
      "answer": "Persistent hematuria, proteinuria, early kidney disease, kidney failure in relatives, hearing loss, and eye findings make hereditary kidney disease more likely and make testing more useful.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Kidney Disease Genetic Testing | Alport, Hematuria, Family Risk, and Biopsy Clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1425,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative panel rule out hereditary kidney disease?",
      "answer": "No. A negative panel does not always rule it out if the phenotype still looks inherited, because some causes are not covered, not detected, or not yet understood.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Kidney Disease Genetic Testing | Alport, Hematuria, Family Risk, and Biopsy Clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1426,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is Alport syndrome the same as all hereditary kidney disease?",
      "answer": "No. Alport syndrome is one important example, but hereditary kidney disease can include other inherited glomerular or cystic disorders, each with its own testing strategy.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Kidney Disease Genetic Testing | Alport, Hematuria, Family Risk, and Biopsy Clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1427,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if urinalysis shows blood but creatinine is normal?",
      "answer": "That can still matter. Early glomerular disease may show hematuria before kidney function falls, so urine findings, family history, and follow-up testing can still be important.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Kidney Disease Genetic Testing | Alport, Hematuria, Family Risk, and Biopsy Clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1428,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives or kidney donors be tested?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic variant is found, relatives may be offered targeted testing. Living donor questions deserve extra caution if there is family hematuria, hearing loss, or kidney failure.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Kidney Disease Genetic Testing | Alport, Hematuria, Family Risk, and Biopsy Clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1429,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests usually happen alongside genetic testing?",
      "answer": "Urinalysis, UACR or UPCR, creatinine, eGFR, and sometimes cystatin C or kidney biopsy can help place the DNA result into the larger kidney picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Kidney Disease Genetic Testing | Alport, Hematuria, Family Risk, and Biopsy Clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-kidney-disease-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1430,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive PRSS1 result mean every relative needs the same test?",
      "answer": "Often close relatives should at least discuss targeted family testing, because hereditary pancreatitis can run in families. But testing plans should be individualized, especially if the family history is not straightforward.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary pancreatitis genetic testing | recurrent pancreatitis, PRSS1, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1431,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a negative panel rule out a genetic cause of pancreatitis?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result does not rule out every inherited or multifactorial risk, and some pancreatitis genes may not be included on a given panel.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary pancreatitis genetic testing | recurrent pancreatitis, PRSS1, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1432,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is hereditary pancreatitis the same as a single bad gallstone attack?",
      "answer": "No. Hereditary pancreatitis is usually considered when attacks are recurrent, unusually early, or clustered in a family, after common causes have been reviewed.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary pancreatitis genetic testing | recurrent pancreatitis, PRSS1, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1433,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should smoking or alcohol matter if a genetic variant is found?",
      "answer": "Yes. Lifestyle factors can worsen injury and may increase pancreatic cancer risk, so they still matter even when the underlying risk is genetic.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary pancreatitis genetic testing | recurrent pancreatitis, PRSS1, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1434,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the result is a variant of uncertain significance?",
      "answer": "A VUS should not be treated like a proven cause on its own. It usually needs genetics review, family context, and sometimes reclassification over time.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary pancreatitis genetic testing | recurrent pancreatitis, PRSS1, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1435,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is this a general wellness screen?",
      "answer": "No. It is most useful when the pancreatitis history makes a hereditary or multifactorial cause plausible and the result could change counseling or follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary pancreatitis genetic testing | recurrent pancreatitis, PRSS1, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-pancreatitis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1436,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a hereditary thrombophilia panel usually include?",
      "answer": "It usually includes Factor V Leiden and prothrombin G20210A, and sometimes protein C, protein S, or antithrombin evaluation depending on the clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Thrombophilia Testing | Factor V, Prothrombin, Protein C/S, and Antithrombin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1437,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is thrombophilia testing more likely to help?",
      "answer": "ASH guidance says testing may be useful in selected situations where the result could change prevention, treatment duration, pregnancy planning, or family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Thrombophilia Testing | Factor V, Prothrombin, Protein C/S, and Antithrombin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1438,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative panel rule out clot risk?",
      "answer": "No. Surgery, cancer, pregnancy, estrogen exposure, immobility, smoking, and prior clots can still drive risk even when a hereditary panel is negative.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Thrombophilia Testing | Factor V, Prothrombin, Protein C/S, and Antithrombin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1439,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why can protein C, protein S, or antithrombin results be tricky?",
      "answer": "Those results can be affected by acute thrombosis, anticoagulants, pregnancy, liver disease, and other acquired conditions, so timing matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Thrombophilia Testing | Factor V, Prothrombin, Protein C/S, and Antithrombin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1440,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is antiphospholipid syndrome the same as inherited thrombophilia?",
      "answer": "No. Antiphospholipid syndrome is an acquired clotting disorder and is usually evaluated separately from inherited DNA-based thrombophilia testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Thrombophilia Testing | Factor V, Prothrombin, Protein C/S, and Antithrombin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1441,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should relatives always be tested if one result is positive?",
      "answer": "Not always. Targeted family testing makes the most sense when the result will change management for relatives or clarify a known familial pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Hereditary Thrombophilia Testing | Factor V, Prothrombin, Protein C/S, and Antithrombin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hereditary-thrombophilia-panel-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1442,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the best herpes test when sores are present?",
      "answer": "CDC guidance says genital herpes lesions should be confirmed by type-specific virologic testing from the lesion, such as HSV NAAT/PCR or culture, when lesions are present. NAAT/PCR is generally the most sensitive test from a lesion sample.",
      "pageTitle": "Herpes Testing Guide | HSV PCR Swab, Culture, IgG Blood Tests, IgM, and False Positives",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1443,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does CDC recommend routine herpes blood testing for everyone?",
      "answer": "No. CDC does not recommend herpes testing for people without symptoms in most situations, and USPSTF recommends against routine serologic screening for genital herpes in asymptomatic adolescents and adults, including pregnant people.",
      "pageTitle": "Herpes Testing Guide | HSV PCR Swab, Culture, IgG Blood Tests, IgM, and False Positives",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1444,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why can HSV-2 IgG blood tests be falsely positive?",
      "answer": "CDC and FDA warn that HSV-2 serology can produce false reactive results, especially in low-risk people and with low-positive index values. Confirmatory testing may be needed before treating a low-positive HSV-2 blood result as a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Herpes Testing Guide | HSV PCR Swab, Culture, IgG Blood Tests, IgM, and False Positives",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1445,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should HSV IgM be used to diagnose herpes?",
      "answer": "CDC says HSV IgM testing is not useful because it is not type specific and can be positive during recurrent oral or genital episodes. A type-specific HSV-1 and HSV-2 IgG test is the relevant blood-test category when serology is appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "Herpes Testing Guide | HSV PCR Swab, Culture, IgG Blood Tests, IgM, and False Positives",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1446,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a negative swab rule out herpes?",
      "answer": "Not always. CDC notes that culture sensitivity decreases as lesions heal, and a negative test from an older lesion or absent lesion does not rule out HSV because viral shedding is intermittent.",
      "pageTitle": "Herpes Testing Guide | HSV PCR Swab, Culture, IgG Blood Tests, IgM, and False Positives",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1447,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should pregnant people ask about herpes testing?",
      "answer": "Pregnant people should tell a clinician about genital symptoms or a partner with genital herpes. CDC pregnancy guidance says routine HSV-2 serologic screening is not recommended, but type-specific serology may be useful in selected counseling situations.",
      "pageTitle": "Herpes Testing Guide | HSV PCR Swab, Culture, IgG Blood Tests, IgM, and False Positives",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/herpes-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1448,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What genes are usually tested for HHT?",
      "answer": "ENG, ACVRL1, and SMAD4 are the core genes on many clinical panels. Some panels also include additional vascular-malformation genes or deletion/duplication analysis.",
      "pageTitle": "HHT genetic testing | AVMs, anemia, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1449,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out HHT?",
      "answer": "No. If the clinical picture is strong, HHT can still be present even when a panel is negative or inconclusive.",
      "pageTitle": "HHT genetic testing | AVMs, anemia, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1450,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does SMAD4 matter?",
      "answer": "SMAD4 can overlap with juvenile polyposis, so the result may change colon and GI surveillance questions in addition to HHT screening.",
      "pageTitle": "HHT genetic testing | AVMs, anemia, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1451,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What screening may follow a positive result?",
      "answer": "Clinicians often consider AVM screening in the lungs and brain, plus anemia and iron evaluation if bleeding is ongoing.",
      "pageTitle": "HHT genetic testing | AVMs, anemia, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1452,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should children or siblings be tested?",
      "answer": "If there is a known familial pathogenic variant, cascade testing can identify relatives who should be screened earlier.",
      "pageTitle": "HHT genetic testing | AVMs, anemia, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1453,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is HHT just nosebleeds?",
      "answer": "No. Nosebleeds are common, but the bigger issue is whether silent AVMs or chronic bleeding are present and need follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "HHT genetic testing | AVMs, anemia, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hht-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1454,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why does ferritin rise with liver enzymes?",
      "answer": "Ferritin can rise from iron overload, but it also behaves like an inflammation marker. Liver injury, fatty liver, alcohol, infection, and other stressors can push it up too.",
      "pageTitle": "High ferritin with liver enzymes | Iron overload, inflammation, fatty liver, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1455,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does high ferritin automatically mean hemochromatosis?",
      "answer": "No. Hemochromatosis is one possibility, but transferrin saturation, liver pattern, family history, and repeat testing help decide whether iron overload is likely.",
      "pageTitle": "High ferritin with liver enzymes | Iron overload, inflammation, fatty liver, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1456,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does high ferritin with normal transferrin saturation suggest?",
      "answer": "That pattern often points more toward inflammation, liver disease, metabolic dysfunction, infection, or another non-overload cause than classic hemochromatosis.",
      "pageTitle": "High ferritin with liver enzymes | Iron overload, inflammation, fatty liver, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1457,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why are ALT, AST, and GGT helpful here?",
      "answer": "Those enzymes help show whether there is liver-cell injury, alcohol-related stress, cholestasis, or another liver pattern alongside the ferritin result.",
      "pageTitle": "High ferritin with liver enzymes | Iron overload, inflammation, fatty liver, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1458,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests usually come next?",
      "answer": "A full iron panel, CBC, repeat ferritin, transferrin saturation, and often liver-related follow-up such as hepatitis testing, ultrasound, or specialist review.",
      "pageTitle": "High ferritin with liver enzymes | Iron overload, inflammation, fatty liver, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1459,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is follow-up more urgent?",
      "answer": "Follow-up matters more when ferritin is very high, liver enzymes are rising, bilirubin or INR are abnormal, there are symptoms, or there is a strong family history of iron overload.",
      "pageTitle": "High ferritin with liver enzymes | Iron overload, inflammation, fatty liver, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/high-ferritin-liver-enzymes.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1460,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main timing difference between HIV PrEP and PEP?",
      "answer": "PrEP is ongoing HIV prevention used before possible exposure. PEP is emergency HIV prevention after a possible exposure and should be evaluated rapidly when care is sought within 72 hours.",
      "pageTitle": "HIV PrEP vs PEP Testing Timelines | 72 Hours, Follow-Up, and STI Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-prep-vs-pep-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hiv-prep-vs-pep-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-prep-vs-pep-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1461,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does PEP require HIV testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC says baseline HIV testing is part of PEP evaluation, but if rapid testing is not available and PEP is indicated, the first dose should be started immediately rather than delayed for lab results.",
      "pageTitle": "HIV PrEP vs PEP Testing Timelines | 72 Hours, Follow-Up, and STI Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-prep-vs-pep-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hiv-prep-vs-pep-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-prep-vs-pep-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1462,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can an HIV test detect HIV immediately after exposure?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says no HIV test can detect HIV immediately after infection because each HIV test type has a window period.",
      "pageTitle": "HIV Testing Window Period Guide | 10-33, 18-45, 18-90, and 23-90 Day Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1463,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the window period for a lab antigen/antibody HIV test?",
      "answer": "CDC says an antigen/antibody lab test using blood from a vein can usually detect HIV 18 to 45 days after exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "HIV Testing Window Period Guide | 10-33, 18-45, 18-90, and 23-90 Day Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1464,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the window period for a rapid or oral HIV self-test?",
      "answer": "Most rapid tests and self-tests are antibody tests. CDC says antibody tests can usually detect HIV 23 to 90 days after exposure; rapid antigen/antibody finger-stick tests can usually detect HIV 18 to 90 days after exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "HIV Testing Window Period Guide | 10-33, 18-45, 18-90, and 23-90 Day Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1465,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What should you do after a negative HIV test following a possible exposure?",
      "answer": "If you test after a possible exposure and the result is negative, CDC says to test again after the window period for the type of test used. A negative result is strongest when the most recent test is after the window period and no new exposure happened during that time.",
      "pageTitle": "HIV Testing Window Period Guide | 10-33, 18-45, 18-90, and 23-90 Day Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1466,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is HIV PEP time-sensitive?",
      "answer": "CDC says PEP must be started within 72 hours after a possible HIV exposure and that every hour counts, so recent possible exposure should be discussed quickly with urgent care, an emergency department, or another qualified clinician.",
      "pageTitle": "HIV Testing Window Period Guide | 10-33, 18-45, 18-90, and 23-90 Day Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1467,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive HIV self-test need follow-up?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC says a positive self-test or community-program test should be followed up with a health care provider for confirmatory testing and care linkage.",
      "pageTitle": "HIV Testing Window Period Guide | 10-33, 18-45, 18-90, and 23-90 Day Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hiv-testing-window-period.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1468,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an HLA-B27 blood test look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for a protein on white blood cells that is associated with certain inflammatory joint and eye conditions. It is a clue, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Blood Test | Spondyloarthritis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1469,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive HLA-B27 result mean I have ankylosing spondylitis?",
      "answer": "No. A positive result can support the diagnosis when symptoms fit, but it does not prove ankylosing spondylitis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Blood Test | Spondyloarthritis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1470,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out inflammatory arthritis?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result does not rule out ankylosing spondylitis, reactive arthritis, or other inflammatory disease when symptoms and imaging suggest them.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Blood Test | Spondyloarthritis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1471,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is HLA-B27 more useful?",
      "answer": "It is more useful when there is inflammatory back pain, morning stiffness, uveitis, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, reactive arthritis, or a strong family history.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Blood Test | Spondyloarthritis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1472,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is HLA-B27 used as a screening test?",
      "answer": "Usually not. It works best as part of a targeted workup, not as a broad screen for back pain or future disease risk.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Blood Test | Spondyloarthritis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1473,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What other tests or clues matter with HLA-B27?",
      "answer": "Symptoms, exam findings, CRP, ESR, X-rays, MRI of the sacroiliac joints, and eye or bowel symptoms usually matter more than the test alone.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Blood Test | Spondyloarthritis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1474,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an HLA-B27 test look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for a protein on white blood cells that is associated with certain inflammatory joint and eye conditions. It is a clue, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Test | Ankylosing Spondylitis, Spondyloarthritis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1475,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive HLA-B27 test mean I have ankylosing spondylitis?",
      "answer": "No. A positive result can support the diagnosis when symptoms fit, but it does not prove ankylosing spondylitis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Test | Ankylosing Spondylitis, Spondyloarthritis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1476,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative HLA-B27 test rule out inflammatory arthritis?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result does not rule out ankylosing spondylitis, reactive arthritis, or other inflammatory disease when symptoms and imaging suggest them.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Test | Ankylosing Spondylitis, Spondyloarthritis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1477,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is HLA-B27 more useful?",
      "answer": "It is more useful when there is inflammatory back pain, morning stiffness, uveitis, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, reactive arthritis, or a strong family history.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Test | Ankylosing Spondylitis, Spondyloarthritis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1478,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is HLA-B27 used as a screening test?",
      "answer": "Usually not. It works best as part of a targeted workup, not as a broad screen for back pain or future disease risk.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Test | Ankylosing Spondylitis, Spondyloarthritis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1479,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What other tests or clues matter with HLA-B27?",
      "answer": "Symptoms, exam findings, CRP, ESR, X-rays, MRI of the sacroiliac joints, and eye or bowel symptoms usually matter more than the test alone.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Test | Ankylosing Spondylitis, Spondyloarthritis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1480,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What eye symptoms should be taken seriously?",
      "answer": "Eye pain, redness, light sensitivity, or blurred vision can fit uveitis and should be evaluated promptly, especially when HLA-B27 or spondyloarthritis is part of the story.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA-B27 Test | Ankylosing Spondylitis, Spondyloarthritis, Uveitis, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-b27-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-b27-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1481,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive HLA result mean I have celiac disease?",
      "answer": "No. A positive HLA result means susceptibility, not a diagnosis. Blood tests, diet context, and sometimes biopsy still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA Celiac Genetic Testing | gluten-free diet, uncertain results, and rule-out use",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1482,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a negative HLA result rule celiac disease out?",
      "answer": "A negative result can make celiac disease very unlikely, especially if DQ2.5, DQ2.2, and DQ8 are absent.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA Celiac Genetic Testing | gluten-free diet, uncertain results, and rule-out use",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1483,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why order HLA if I already went gluten-free?",
      "answer": "Because HLA does not change with diet. It can still help decide whether celiac disease remains plausible and whether a gluten challenge is worth discussing.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA Celiac Genetic Testing | gluten-free diet, uncertain results, and rule-out use",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1484,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is HLA the same as a celiac blood test?",
      "answer": "No. HLA looks for inherited risk patterns. Blood tests like tTG-IgA look for antibodies that suggest active immune response to gluten.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA Celiac Genetic Testing | gluten-free diet, uncertain results, and rule-out use",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1485,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do family members need the same test?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, especially with a first-degree relative who has celiac disease. But many carriers never develop the disease, so the result has to be interpreted carefully.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA Celiac Genetic Testing | gluten-free diet, uncertain results, and rule-out use",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1486,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Do I still need biopsy after HLA testing?",
      "answer": "If celiac disease is still on the table, HLA alone is not enough. Blood tests and sometimes duodenal biopsy are still used to confirm the diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "HLA Celiac Genetic Testing | gluten-free diet, uncertain results, and rule-out use",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-celiac-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1487,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does HLA-DQ2 or HLA-DQ8 mean I have celiac disease?",
      "answer": "No. Those patterns show susceptibility, but they are common enough that many people with them never develop celiac disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac HLA typing | DQ2, DQ8, rule-out use, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1488,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a negative HLA test rule out celiac disease?",
      "answer": "It can make celiac disease very unlikely, especially if the key HLA-DQ2 and HLA-DQ8 patterns are absent.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac HLA typing | DQ2, DQ8, rule-out use, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1489,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should I be eating gluten before HLA typing?",
      "answer": "HLA typing is not affected the way celiac antibody tests are, so gluten intake matters more for tTG-IgA, EMA-IgA, and biopsy than for HLA itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac HLA typing | DQ2, DQ8, rule-out use, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1490,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do doctors sometimes order HLA typing after a gluten-free diet starts?",
      "answer": "Because once someone is gluten-free, serology and biopsy can become harder to interpret. HLA can still help decide whether celiac disease is plausible at all.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac HLA typing | DQ2, DQ8, rule-out use, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1491,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is HLA typing the same as a celiac blood test?",
      "answer": "No. Blood tests look for antibodies. HLA typing looks for inherited genetic patterns that increase susceptibility.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac HLA typing | DQ2, DQ8, rule-out use, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1492,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does HLA typing replace biopsy?",
      "answer": "No. If celiac disease is still on the table, blood tests and sometimes biopsy are still the tests that help confirm the diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac HLA typing | DQ2, DQ8, rule-out use, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1493,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if I already started a gluten-free diet?",
      "answer": "HLA typing can still help because it is not dependent on current gluten intake the way antibody tests and biopsy are, but it still does not diagnose celiac disease by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Celiac HLA typing | DQ2, DQ8, rule-out use, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hla-typing-celiac-disease.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1494,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is homocysteine a routine heart-risk screening test?",
      "answer": "No. MedlinePlus says routine screening for heart disease risk is not recommended for everyone.",
      "pageTitle": "Homocysteine and Methylmalonic Acid Tests | B12, Folate, Kidney Effects, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1495,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which test is better for vitamin B12 deficiency?",
      "answer": "MMA is generally the more sensitive follow-up marker for B12 status, especially when serum B12 is borderline.",
      "pageTitle": "Homocysteine and Methylmalonic Acid Tests | B12, Folate, Kidney Effects, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1496,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can kidney disease affect these tests?",
      "answer": "Yes. Kidney dysfunction can raise MMA and homocysteine, so renal context matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Homocysteine and Methylmalonic Acid Tests | B12, Folate, Kidney Effects, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1497,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why might my doctor order both tests?",
      "answer": "Using both can help separate B12-related patterns from folate-related or other causes.",
      "pageTitle": "Homocysteine and Methylmalonic Acid Tests | B12, Folate, Kidney Effects, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1498,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I start supplements before the blood draw?",
      "answer": "Not without asking. Supplements can change the pattern and make the interpretation less useful.",
      "pageTitle": "Homocysteine and Methylmalonic Acid Tests | B12, Folate, Kidney Effects, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1499,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the result is high but I feel fine?",
      "answer": "That usually means the next step is context, not panic: look at CBC, B12, folate, kidney function, and the reason the test was ordered.",
      "pageTitle": "Homocysteine and Methylmalonic Acid Tests | B12, Folate, Kidney Effects, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/homocysteine-methylmalonic-acid-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1500,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a hookworm stool test look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for hookworm eggs in stool, usually as part of a stool ova and parasite examination.",
      "pageTitle": "Hookworm Stool Test | Ova and Parasites, Anemia, Eosinophils, Travel, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1501,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is anemia part of the conversation?",
      "answer": "Because hookworms can cause blood loss, so iron-deficiency anemia can support the workup when exposure history fits.",
      "pageTitle": "Hookworm Stool Test | Ova and Parasites, Anemia, Eosinophils, Travel, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1502,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can one stool sample miss hookworm?",
      "answer": "Yes. A single specimen can be negative even when hookworm is still present, so repeat collection may be requested.",
      "pageTitle": "Hookworm Stool Test | Ova and Parasites, Anemia, Eosinophils, Travel, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1503,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do eosinophils prove hookworm?",
      "answer": "No. Eosinophilia can point toward a parasite workup but does not identify the parasite.",
      "pageTitle": "Hookworm Stool Test | Ova and Parasites, Anemia, Eosinophils, Travel, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1504,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Could another parasite need different testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. Strongyloides and other parasites can need a different test strategy even when stool microscopy is part of the picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Hookworm Stool Test | Ova and Parasites, Anemia, Eosinophils, Travel, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1505,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get prompt care?",
      "answer": "Prompt care matters more with severe anemia symptoms, dehydration, blood in stool, severe abdominal pain, or immune suppression.",
      "pageTitle": "Hookworm Stool Test | Ova and Parasites, Anemia, Eosinophils, Travel, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1506,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "When is treatment more urgent than another stool sample?",
      "answer": "If anemia, worsening symptoms, or a strong exposure history fit, clinicians may treat or broaden the workup instead of relying on one negative specimen.",
      "pageTitle": "Hookworm Stool Test | Ova and Parasites, Anemia, Eosinophils, Travel, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hookworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1507,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do panels work better than single hormone tests?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. The right answer depends on the question being asked.",
      "pageTitle": "Hormone Panel Tests Guide | Cortisol, Testosterone, Thyroid, Sex Hormones, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1508,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do timing rules matter so much?",
      "answer": "Many hormones vary by time of day, menstrual cycle phase, or recent medications.",
      "pageTitle": "Hormone Panel Tests Guide | Cortisol, Testosterone, Thyroid, Sex Hormones, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1509,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should saliva panels replace blood tests?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Some saliva tests are useful for specific questions, but they do not automatically generalize.",
      "pageTitle": "Hormone Panel Tests Guide | Cortisol, Testosterone, Thyroid, Sex Hormones, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1510,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is a focused test better?",
      "answer": "When one symptom cluster points to one hormone system, such as thyroid, testosterone, or cortisol.",
      "pageTitle": "Hormone Panel Tests Guide | Cortisol, Testosterone, Thyroid, Sex Hormones, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1511,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a broad panel justify supplements?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. The test should answer a clinical question before it drives treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Hormone Panel Tests Guide | Cortisol, Testosterone, Thyroid, Sex Hormones, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1512,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the safest interpretation?",
      "answer": "Use the panel to narrow a question, not to label your entire hormone system as broken.",
      "pageTitle": "Hormone Panel Tests Guide | Cortisol, Testosterone, Thyroid, Sex Hormones, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hormone-panel-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1513,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do Howell-Jolly bodies usually mean?",
      "answer": "They usually mean the spleen is not filtering red cells normally, so absent or reduced spleen function is the first thing to think about.",
      "pageTitle": "Howell-Jolly bodies on blood smear interpretation | Spleen function, hyposplenia, asplenia, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1514,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can Howell-Jolly bodies happen after splenectomy?",
      "answer": "Yes. After splenectomy, Howell-Jolly bodies are expected because the spleen is no longer there to remove nuclear remnants from red cells.",
      "pageTitle": "Howell-Jolly bodies on blood smear interpretation | Spleen function, hyposplenia, asplenia, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1515,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What if there was no spleen surgery?",
      "answer": "Functional hyposplenia, sickle cell disease, isolated congenital asplenia, and some autoimmune or inflammatory conditions can reduce spleen filtering.",
      "pageTitle": "Howell-Jolly bodies on blood smear interpretation | Spleen function, hyposplenia, asplenia, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1516,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do Howell-Jolly bodies ever suggest B12 or folate deficiency?",
      "answer": "Yes. Severe megaloblastic anemia from vitamin B12 or folate deficiency can sometimes leave Howell-Jolly bodies on the smear.",
      "pageTitle": "Howell-Jolly bodies on blood smear interpretation | Spleen function, hyposplenia, asplenia, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1517,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does this finding matter clinically?",
      "answer": "Because reduced spleen function changes infection risk and vaccine planning, so the next step is often to make sure asplenia precautions are covered.",
      "pageTitle": "Howell-Jolly bodies on blood smear interpretation | Spleen function, hyposplenia, asplenia, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1518,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What other smear clues help interpret them?",
      "answer": "Macrocytosis, target cells, nucleated red blood cells, and other inclusion bodies can help point toward the cause of the finding.",
      "pageTitle": "Howell-Jolly bodies on blood smear interpretation | Spleen function, hyposplenia, asplenia, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/howell-jolly-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1519,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is an HPV test part of a full STI panel?",
      "answer": "Usually no. HPV tests are used mainly for cervical cancer screening and follow-up of abnormal cervical screening results, not as a general STI panel test.",
      "pageTitle": "HPV Testing and Pap Tests | Why They Are Not a Full STI Panel",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hpv-pap-test-sti-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hpv-pap-test-sti-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hpv-pap-test-sti-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1520,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a Pap test the same as an HPV test?",
      "answer": "No. A Pap test looks for cervical cell changes, while an HPV test looks for high-risk HPV types linked to cervical cancer. A cotest uses both.",
      "pageTitle": "HPV Testing and Pap Tests | Why They Are Not a Full STI Panel",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hpv-pap-test-sti-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hpv-pap-test-sti-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hpv-pap-test-sti-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1521,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Hymenolepis nana testing help with?",
      "answer": "It helps evaluate possible dwarf tapeworm infection when stool findings, exposures, or a prior positive result make the question plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "Hymenolepis Nana Tapeworm Testing | Dwarf Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Reinfection, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1522,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one stool sample miss it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Repeated stool examination can improve detection, especially in light infections.",
      "pageTitle": "Hymenolepis Nana Tapeworm Testing | Dwarf Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Reinfection, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1523,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does household context matter?",
      "answer": "The parasite can spread in households or crowded settings, so reinfection and hygiene issues matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Hymenolepis Nana Tapeworm Testing | Dwarf Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Reinfection, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1524,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can children have it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Children may be affected, and household or institutional exposure can matter more than travel history.",
      "pageTitle": "Hymenolepis Nana Tapeworm Testing | Dwarf Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Reinfection, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1525,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a positive stool egg test mean broad gut disease?",
      "answer": "No. It is a targeted parasite finding and does not measure microbiome diversity or wellness.",
      "pageTitle": "Hymenolepis Nana Tapeworm Testing | Dwarf Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Reinfection, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1526,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician can decide whether treatment, household follow-up, repeat stool testing, or broader evaluation is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Hymenolepis Nana Tapeworm Testing | Dwarf Tapeworm, Stool Ova and Parasite, Eggs, Reinfection, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hymenolepis-nana-tapeworm-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1527,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do hypersegmented neutrophils usually mean?",
      "answer": "They are a classic clue for megaloblastic anemia, most often from vitamin B12 or folate deficiency, but they still need CBC and clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Hypersegmented neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | B12, folate, macrocytosis, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1528,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can hypersegmented neutrophils happen without anemia?",
      "answer": "Yes. Early deficiency or mixed anemia patterns can show hypersegmented neutrophils before hemoglobin clearly falls.",
      "pageTitle": "Hypersegmented neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | B12, folate, macrocytosis, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1529,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What tests are usually checked next?",
      "answer": "Clinicians often review the CBC, reticulocyte count, vitamin B12, folate, methylmalonic acid, homocysteine, and any medication or absorption clues.",
      "pageTitle": "Hypersegmented neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | B12, folate, macrocytosis, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1530,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can folate make B12 deficiency harder to spot?",
      "answer": "Folate can improve anemia while neurologic B12 injury continues, so B12 should be evaluated carefully when hypersegmented neutrophils are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Hypersegmented neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | B12, folate, macrocytosis, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1531,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Could medicines or alcohol contribute?",
      "answer": "Yes. Medicines, alcohol use, and other causes of macrocytosis can affect the picture, so the smear should be read with the rest of the CBC and history.",
      "pageTitle": "Hypersegmented neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | B12, folate, macrocytosis, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1532,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is this finding more concerning?",
      "answer": "It is more concerning when it appears with cytopenias, blasts, neurologic symptoms, severe anemia, or persistent abnormalities that do not fit a simple vitamin deficiency.",
      "pageTitle": "Hypersegmented neutrophils on blood smear interpretation | B12, folate, macrocytosis, and megaloblastic anemia",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/hypersegmented-neutrophils-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1533,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are immature granulocytes?",
      "answer": "Immature granulocytes are early forms in the neutrophil lineage. They are normally kept in the bone marrow, but a CBC may detect them in blood when the marrow is responding to infection, inflammation, stress, or recovery.",
      "pageTitle": "High Immature Granulocytes | Left Shift, Infection, Inflammation, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1534,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does high immature granulocytes mean?",
      "answer": "High immature granulocytes usually suggest a left shift. That can fit infection, inflammation, tissue stress, pregnancy, medications, or marrow recovery, but it is not a diagnosis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "High Immature Granulocytes | Left Shift, Infection, Inflammation, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1535,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can immature granulocytes be high with normal WBC?",
      "answer": "Yes. The total WBC can be normal while immature granulocytes are still increased. That is why clinicians look at the whole differential, ANC, symptoms, and trend over time.",
      "pageTitle": "High Immature Granulocytes | Left Shift, Infection, Inflammation, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1536,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a high immature granulocyte count mean sepsis?",
      "answer": "No. It can appear in sepsis or serious infection, but it does not prove sepsis. Vital signs, symptoms, lactate when ordered, cultures, organ function, and the overall clinical picture determine urgency.",
      "pageTitle": "High Immature Granulocytes | Left Shift, Infection, Inflammation, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1537,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual smear review, infection or inflammation evaluation, medication review, and hematology input if other abnormal cells or cytopenias are present.",
      "pageTitle": "High Immature Granulocytes | Left Shift, Infection, Inflammation, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1538,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should high immature granulocytes be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Seek prompt medical guidance if high immature granulocytes appear with fever, low blood pressure, confusion, shortness of breath, severe pain, rapidly worsening symptoms, very high or very low WBC, low neutrophils, low platelets, severe anemia, blasts, or Auer rods.",
      "pageTitle": "High Immature Granulocytes | Left Shift, Infection, Inflammation, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-granulocytes-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1539,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does immature lymphocytes on a CBC mean?",
      "answer": "It depends on the exact report wording. The phrase may reflect an automated analyzer flag, a manual smear description, reactive or atypical lymphocytes, blast-like cells, or true lymphoblasts. The rest of the CBC, symptoms, trend, and smear review determine the next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Immature Lymphocytes on CBC | Analyzer Flags, Reactive Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1540,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are immature lymphocytes the same as blasts?",
      "answer": "Not always. Some reports use immature or atypical wording for reactive-appearing cells, while blasts or lymphoblasts are immature precursor cells and carry a different level of concern. If the report says blasts, possible blasts, or blast-like cells, prompt clinician follow-up is important.",
      "pageTitle": "Immature Lymphocytes on CBC | Analyzer Flags, Reactive Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1541,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can infection cause immature or reactive lymphocyte wording?",
      "answer": "Yes. Infections and other immune stimulation can lead to reactive or atypical lymphocyte wording. That does not automatically mean leukemia, but the exact phrase, absolute lymphocyte count, smear comment, symptoms, and whether the result persists still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Immature Lymphocytes on CBC | Analyzer Flags, Reactive Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1542,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does a smear review matter?",
      "answer": "A manual peripheral smear lets trained reviewers inspect blood cell appearance directly. It can help clarify whether an analyzer flag fits reactive lymphocytes, atypical lymphocytes, immature-appearing cells, blast-like cells, true blasts, or another pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Immature Lymphocytes on CBC | Analyzer Flags, Reactive Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1543,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is flow cytometry used?",
      "answer": "Flow cytometry may be used when the smear or CBC raises concern for blasts, leukemia, lymphoma, or a clonal lymphocyte population. It studies markers on cells and helps classify abnormal cell populations when morphology alone is not enough.",
      "pageTitle": "Immature Lymphocytes on CBC | Analyzer Flags, Reactive Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1544,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should immature lymphocyte wording be followed up quickly?",
      "answer": "Follow up promptly if the report mentions blasts, lymphoblasts, possible blasts, blast-like cells, abnormal lymphoid cells, suspicious cells, or urgent review, or if there are fever, severe illness, bruising, anemia, low platelets, low neutrophils, weight loss, night sweats, enlarged lymph nodes, spleen enlargement, or a rapidly changing count.",
      "pageTitle": "Immature Lymphocytes on CBC | Analyzer Flags, Reactive Cells, Blasts, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/immature-lymphocytes-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1545,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive JAK2 result mean I have cancer?",
      "answer": "It suggests a clonal myeloid disorder may be present, but the exact diagnosis still depends on the CBC pattern, symptoms, bone marrow findings, and the rest of the workup.",
      "pageTitle": "JAK2 testing for unexplained clots | PV, ET, MPNs, and blood-count clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1546,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can JAK2 be used as a general clot screen?",
      "answer": "No. It is most useful when the blood counts or clot location make an MPN plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "JAK2 testing for unexplained clots | PV, ET, MPNs, and blood-count clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1547,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What if JAK2 is negative but the platelets are still high?",
      "answer": "CALR, MPL, iron studies, inflammation, and bone marrow evaluation may still matter depending on the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "JAK2 testing for unexplained clots | PV, ET, MPNs, and blood-count clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1548,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if the hematocrit is high but JAK2 is negative?",
      "answer": "Secondary causes of erythrocytosis should be reviewed, and exon 12 or broader MPN testing may be considered in the right setting.",
      "pageTitle": "JAK2 testing for unexplained clots | PV, ET, MPNs, and blood-count clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1549,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is JAK2 inherited from a parent?",
      "answer": "Usually not. The common MPN-associated JAK2 changes are somatic, meaning they are acquired in blood-forming cells.",
      "pageTitle": "JAK2 testing for unexplained clots | PV, ET, MPNs, and blood-count clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1550,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should I also have APS or inherited thrombophilia testing?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, but they answer different questions. The right choice depends on the clot pattern, CBC findings, age, and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "JAK2 testing for unexplained clots | PV, ET, MPNs, and blood-count clues",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/jak2-testing-unexplained-clots.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1551,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What blood tests check kidney function?",
      "answer": "Common kidney-related blood tests include creatinine, estimated glomerular filtration rate or eGFR, and BUN. Creatinine and BUN are often included in a basic metabolic panel or comprehensive metabolic panel.",
      "pageTitle": "Kidney Function Tests | eGFR, Creatinine, BUN, and UACR Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kidney-function-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kidney-function-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kidney-function-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1552,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is eGFR more useful than creatinine alone?",
      "answer": "MedlinePlus says eGFR is usually a more accurate way to measure kidney health than creatinine alone because creatinine levels vary with factors such as muscle mass, diet, age, and activity.",
      "pageTitle": "Kidney Function Tests | eGFR, Creatinine, BUN, and UACR Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kidney-function-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kidney-function-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kidney-function-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1553,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is cystatin C ordered?",
      "answer": "Cystatin C may be ordered when creatinine-based eGFR may be less reliable, when muscle mass makes creatinine harder to interpret, or when a more precise kidney estimate is needed for a decision.",
      "pageTitle": "Kidney Function Tests | eGFR, Creatinine, BUN, and UACR Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kidney-function-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kidney-function-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kidney-function-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1554,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is KIT testing a general allergy test?",
      "answer": "No. KIT testing is used when a clonal mast-cell disorder such as systemic mastocytosis is suspected, not as a broad allergy screen.",
      "pageTitle": "KIT Mutation Testing for Mast Cell Disorders | Systemic Mastocytosis, Tryptase, D816V, and Bone Marrow",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1555,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does KIT D816V mean?",
      "answer": "KIT D816V is a common somatic mutation seen in systemic mastocytosis and can support the diagnosis in the right clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "KIT Mutation Testing for Mast Cell Disorders | Systemic Mastocytosis, Tryptase, D816V, and Bone Marrow",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1556,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a blood test rule out mastocytosis?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative blood test may not exclude disease if symptoms, tryptase, pathology, or marrow findings still raise concern.",
      "pageTitle": "KIT Mutation Testing for Mast Cell Disorders | Systemic Mastocytosis, Tryptase, D816V, and Bone Marrow",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1557,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does specimen type matter?",
      "answer": "Blood, bone marrow, and tissue can have different sensitivity for KIT detection, so the sample has to match the clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "KIT Mutation Testing for Mast Cell Disorders | Systemic Mastocytosis, Tryptase, D816V, and Bone Marrow",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1558,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is bone marrow considered?",
      "answer": "Bone marrow is usually considered when suspicion remains high, when a clonal disorder needs confirmation, or when a specialist needs staging information.",
      "pageTitle": "KIT Mutation Testing for Mast Cell Disorders | Systemic Mastocytosis, Tryptase, D816V, and Bone Marrow",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1559,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What else is usually checked with KIT testing?",
      "answer": "Tryptase, CBC, symptoms, skin findings, anaphylaxis history, and organ involvement are usually reviewed alongside KIT testing.",
      "pageTitle": "KIT Mutation Testing for Mast Cell Disorders | Systemic Mastocytosis, Tryptase, D816V, and Bone Marrow",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/kit-mutation-testing-mast-cell-disorders.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1560,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does an abnormal lab flag always mean something is wrong?",
      "answer": "No. A result outside the listed reference range may or may not signal a health problem. The meaning depends on the test, the size of the change, symptoms, history, medicines, preparation, and whether the result repeats.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Result Interpretation Checklist | What to Check Before You React",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1561,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can I compare my result with a reference range from another website?",
      "answer": "Use the reference range printed on your own lab report. Labs may use different methods, units, and reference ranges, so outside ranges can mislead.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Result Interpretation Checklist | What to Check Before You React",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1562,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the first thing to check on a lab result?",
      "answer": "Start with the exact test name, specimen type, collection date, and units. Those details tell you whether you are actually reading the result you think you are reading.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Result Interpretation Checklist | What to Check Before You React",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1563,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should I think about repeat testing?",
      "answer": "Repeat testing is often useful when the result is borderline, unexpected, affected by preparation, or inconsistent with symptoms or prior results.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Result Interpretation Checklist | What to Check Before You React",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1564,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What makes a result urgent?",
      "answer": "A critical flag, severe symptoms, pregnancy, medication safety, chest pain, shortness of breath, bleeding, fainting, neurologic symptoms, or severe abdominal pain can make the result urgent.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Result Interpretation Checklist | What to Check Before You React",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1565,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why does specimen type matter so much?",
      "answer": "Blood, urine, saliva, stool, and swab samples answer different questions. If the specimen type does not fit the question, the result may not be meaningful.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Result Interpretation Checklist | What to Check Before You React",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-result-interpretation-checklist.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1566,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a lab test be accurate and still give a misleading result?",
      "answer": "Yes. A test may measure its target reliably but still be misleading if it is used for the wrong person, specimen, timing, claim, or medical question.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Test Accuracy, False Positives, and False Negatives | What Results Can Miss",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-accuracy-false-positive-false-negative.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-test-accuracy-false-positive-false-negative.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-accuracy-false-positive-false-negative.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1567,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative result always rule out a condition?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result may be reassuring for the question the test was designed to answer, but some tests can miss disease because of timing, specimen type, test limits, or conditions the test was not designed to detect.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Test Accuracy, False Positives, and False Negatives | What Results Can Miss",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-accuracy-false-positive-false-negative.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-test-accuracy-false-positive-false-negative.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-accuracy-false-positive-false-negative.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1568,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why was my annual physical bloodwork not free?",
      "answer": "Preventive services may be covered without cost sharing when they meet plan rules and are provided in network, but labs can be billed differently if they are diagnostic, outside the recommended preventive service, out of network, bundled differently, or tied to symptoms or monitoring.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Test Cost, Insurance, and Cash Pay | Why Prices Vary",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-cost-insurance-cash-pay.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-test-cost-insurance-cash-pay.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-cost-insurance-cash-pay.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1569,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is cash pay always cheaper than using insurance for labs?",
      "answer": "No. Cash-pay prices can be lower for some routine tests, but insurance may be better for covered preventive screening, medically necessary testing, deductibles already met, or follow-up care. The only safe answer is to compare the specific test, lab, plan, and billing path before ordering.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Test Cost, Insurance, and Cash Pay | Why Prices Vary",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-cost-insurance-cash-pay.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-test-cost-insurance-cash-pay.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-cost-insurance-cash-pay.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1570,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does HIPAA protect every at-home lab test or health app?",
      "answer": "No. HIPAA applies to covered entities such as health plans, health care clearinghouses, certain health care providers, and their business associates. Some consumer testing companies and health apps may fall outside HIPAA, though other privacy and consumer-protection laws may still apply.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Test Privacy, Insurance, and Data Sharing | HIPAA, EOBs, DNA, and Apps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-privacy-insurance-data-sharing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-test-privacy-insurance-data-sharing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-privacy-insurance-data-sharing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1571,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can insurance create privacy issues for lab testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. Using insurance can create claims, portal notices, bills, and explanation-of-benefits communications. People with privacy concerns should ask the insurer and testing provider about confidential communications and cash-pay options before testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Lab Test Privacy, Insurance, and Data Sharing | HIPAA, EOBs, DNA, and Apps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-privacy-insurance-data-sharing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lab-test-privacy-insurance-data-sharing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lab-test-privacy-insurance-data-sharing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1572,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a watch lactate threshold estimate replace a lab test?",
      "answer": "No. It can be useful for training, but graded exercise testing with blood lactate or gas exchange is a more direct way to measure threshold physiology.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactate Threshold Wearable Estimates | Training Clues, Blood Lactate Tests, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1573,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do watches disagree with each other?",
      "answer": "Devices may use different heart-rate sensors, algorithms, pace data, VO2 max estimates, and assumptions about training history.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactate Threshold Wearable Estimates | Training Clues, Blood Lactate Tests, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1574,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What inputs matter most?",
      "answer": "Chest-strap heart rate, stable pace data, a sensible max heart rate setting, and enough good workouts matter more than a single test run.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactate Threshold Wearable Estimates | Training Clues, Blood Lactate Tests, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1575,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What makes the estimate less reliable?",
      "answer": "Poor heart-rate signal, hills, wind, heat, terrain, fatigue, unfamiliar workouts, and incorrect athlete profile settings can all distort it.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactate Threshold Wearable Estimates | Training Clues, Blood Lactate Tests, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1576,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is lactate threshold the same as VO2 max?",
      "answer": "No. They are related but different. VO2 max is peak aerobic capacity; lactate threshold is the exercise intensity where physiology starts to shift toward harder-to-sustain work.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactate Threshold Wearable Estimates | Training Clues, Blood Lactate Tests, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1577,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I use a lab test instead?",
      "answer": "Use a lab or professionally supervised field test when training zones matter for competition, when the watch estimate seems off, or when you need better precision.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactate Threshold Wearable Estimates | Training Clues, Blood Lactate Tests, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactate-threshold-wearable-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1578,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a lactose breath test measure?",
      "answer": "It measures hydrogen in your breath after lactose. Higher hydrogen can suggest that lactose was not digested normally and was instead fermented by gut bacteria.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactose Intolerance Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Prep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1579,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do I need to fast before the test?",
      "answer": "Usually yes, but the exact fasting window comes from your lab. You should also ask about smoking, exercise, medicines, and recent antibiotics because those can change the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactose Intolerance Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Prep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1580,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can antibiotics or laxatives affect results?",
      "answer": "Yes. Anything that changes gut bacteria or bowel transit can change the gas pattern and make the result harder to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactose Intolerance Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Prep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1581,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is this the same as a milk allergy test?",
      "answer": "No. Lactose intolerance is a digestion problem, while milk allergy is an immune problem. A lactose breath test does not diagnose allergy.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactose Intolerance Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Prep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1582,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if symptoms continue despite a normal test?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the timing, prep, or test choice was right, and whether celiac disease, SIBO, IBS, pancreatic insufficiency, or another cause should be checked instead.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactose Intolerance Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Prep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1583,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can genetic testing diagnose lactose intolerance?",
      "answer": "Genetic testing can suggest whether lactase persistence is likely in some people, but it does not replace symptoms, diet history, or the clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Lactose Intolerance Breath Test | Hydrogen Breath Testing, Prep, Symptoms, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lactose-intolerance-breath-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1584,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do LDH and haptoglobin show?",
      "answer": "LDH can rise when cells are damaged or broken, while haptoglobin tends to fall when free hemoglobin is released during intravascular hemolysis. Neither result is specific by itself, so the pattern matters more than one number.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH, Haptoglobin, and Hemolysis Labs | Hemolytic Pattern Guide, Bilirubin, Reticulocytes, and Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1585,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can LDH be high for many reasons?",
      "answer": "LDH is found in many tissues, so it can rise with liver injury, muscle injury, hemolysis, infection, tissue damage, or even specimen problems. That is why it is interpreted with the rest of the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH, Haptoglobin, and Hemolysis Labs | Hemolytic Pattern Guide, Bilirubin, Reticulocytes, and Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1586,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can sample hemolysis alter results?",
      "answer": "Yes. A hemolyzed specimen can falsely affect LDH and other analytes. That is a collection problem, not the same thing as hemolytic anemia in the body.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH, Haptoglobin, and Hemolysis Labs | Hemolytic Pattern Guide, Bilirubin, Reticulocytes, and Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1587,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does bilirubin matter in the pattern?",
      "answer": "Indirect bilirubin can rise when red blood cells are being destroyed faster than usual. Bilirubin helps show whether hemolysis is part of the pattern or whether a liver or bile-duct process is more likely.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH, Haptoglobin, and Hemolysis Labs | Hemolytic Pattern Guide, Bilirubin, Reticulocytes, and Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1588,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if LDH is high and haptoglobin is low but symptoms are mild?",
      "answer": "That pattern still deserves context. Some people have mild or early hemolysis, while others have a different reason for the lab changes. CBC trend, bilirubin, reticulocytes, smear review, and symptoms help decide next steps.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH, Haptoglobin, and Hemolysis Labs | Hemolytic Pattern Guide, Bilirubin, Reticulocytes, and Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1589,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests usually come next?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up includes CBC, reticulocyte count, bilirubin, peripheral smear review, kidney function, and sometimes a direct antiglobulin test, depending on whether immune hemolysis or another cause is being considered.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH, Haptoglobin, and Hemolysis Labs | Hemolytic Pattern Guide, Bilirubin, Reticulocytes, and Smear Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-haptoglobin-hemolysis-labs.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1590,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an LDH isoenzymes test actually measure?",
      "answer": "It separates LDH into five isoenzyme forms so the pattern can give a rough tissue clue. It does not diagnose the cause of injury by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH Isoenzymes Test | Why the Pattern Is Niche, What LDH-1 Through LDH-5 Mean, and What Comes Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1591,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "How is this different from a total LDH test?",
      "answer": "Total LDH measures overall enzyme activity. Isoenzymes try to localize where the LDH is coming from, but the extra detail still has limits.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH Isoenzymes Test | Why the Pattern Is Niche, What LDH-1 Through LDH-5 Mean, and What Comes Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1592,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can this test diagnose a heart attack?",
      "answer": "Not reliably by itself. Troponin and ECG are the modern core tests for heart injury, and MedlinePlus notes that troponin has mostly replaced LDH isoenzymes for that purpose.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH Isoenzymes Test | Why the Pattern Is Niche, What LDH-1 Through LDH-5 Mean, and What Comes Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1593,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a hemolyzed blood sample raise LDH?",
      "answer": "Yes. Red blood cells contain LDH, so hemolysis during collection or processing can create a falsely high result or muddy the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH Isoenzymes Test | Why the Pattern Is Niche, What LDH-1 Through LDH-5 Mean, and What Comes Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1594,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why is the test less common now?",
      "answer": "Because LDH is nonspecific and routine isozyme measurement is often unavailable in clinical labs. More specific tests usually answer the question better.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH Isoenzymes Test | Why the Pattern Is Niche, What LDH-1 Through LDH-5 Mean, and What Comes Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1595,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests are often more useful than LDH isoenzymes?",
      "answer": "It depends on the question, but common follow-up tests include troponin, CK, AST, ALT, bilirubin, haptoglobin, reticulocytes, and a CBC or smear.",
      "pageTitle": "LDH Isoenzymes Test | Why the Pattern Is Niche, What LDH-1 Through LDH-5 Mean, and What Comes Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ldh-isoenzymes-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1596,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is leaky gut a recognized diagnosis?",
      "answer": "Not as a single standard diagnosis. Intestinal permeability is a real research concept, but consumer leaky gut testing often stretches the science beyond what current guidelines support.",
      "pageTitle": "Leaky Gut and Intestinal Permeability Tests | Claims, Zonulin, Stool Panels, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1597,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does zonulin testing prove intestinal permeability?",
      "answer": "No. Zonulin is used in research, but commercial assays and interpretation have important limitations, and an abnormal result does not by itself establish a disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Leaky Gut and Intestinal Permeability Tests | Claims, Zonulin, Stool Panels, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1598,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a stool microbiome panel diagnose leaky gut?",
      "answer": "No. A stool microbiome panel may describe organisms or diversity, but it does not directly diagnose barrier dysfunction.",
      "pageTitle": "Leaky Gut and Intestinal Permeability Tests | Claims, Zonulin, Stool Panels, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1599,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Are lactulose-mannitol tests ever useful?",
      "answer": "They can have a role in research or specific clinical contexts, but they are not a universal answer to chronic bloating, fatigue, or vague digestive symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Leaky Gut and Intestinal Permeability Tests | Claims, Zonulin, Stool Panels, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1600,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What symptoms should prompt medical evaluation instead of a wellness test?",
      "answer": "Blood in stool, weight loss, anemia, fever, persistent diarrhea, nighttime symptoms, severe pain, vomiting, or a family history of IBD or colon cancer should push the workup toward medical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Leaky Gut and Intestinal Permeability Tests | Claims, Zonulin, Stool Panels, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1601,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can food sensitivity panels explain leaky gut symptoms?",
      "answer": "Usually not. AAAAI advises against IgG food panel testing for diagnosing food allergy or intolerance, so a long avoid list from an IgG panel should be viewed skeptically.",
      "pageTitle": "Leaky Gut and Intestinal Permeability Tests | Claims, Zonulin, Stool Panels, and Evidence",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leaky-gut-intestinal-permeability-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1602,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does left shift mean on a CBC or blood smear?",
      "answer": "A left shift means younger neutrophil-line cells are appearing in the blood. It may be described as increased bands, immature granulocytes, metamyelocytes, myelocytes, or earlier cells on a CBC differential or peripheral smear.",
      "pageTitle": "Left Shift on Blood Smear | Bands, Immature Granulocytes, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1603,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does left shift mean infection?",
      "answer": "Infection is a common reason for a left shift, especially bacterial infection, but it is not the only reason. Inflammation, tissue injury, surgery, trauma, pregnancy, corticosteroids, growth-factor treatment, marrow recovery, and some marrow disorders can also produce immature granulocyte patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "Left Shift on Blood Smear | Bands, Immature Granulocytes, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1604,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are bands and immature granulocytes the same thing?",
      "answer": "Bands are one immature neutrophil stage. Immature granulocytes is a broader term that may include promyelocytes, myelocytes, and metamyelocytes. Some automated CBCs group immature stages together, while manual differentials may list them separately.",
      "pageTitle": "Left Shift on Blood Smear | Bands, Immature Granulocytes, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1605,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is a left shift always dangerous?",
      "answer": "No. A left shift can be a temporary marrow response during illness or recovery. It is more concerning when it is persistent, unexplained, paired with blasts or Auer rods, or accompanied by severe symptoms, low platelets, severe anemia, low neutrophils, or very high or rapidly changing WBC.",
      "pageTitle": "Left Shift on Blood Smear | Bands, Immature Granulocytes, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1606,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests may follow a left shift?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual peripheral smear review, infection or inflammation evaluation, chemistry tests, cultures or imaging when clinically appropriate, medication and treatment review, and hematology testing such as flow cytometry, bone marrow testing, cytogenetics, FISH, or molecular testing if the pattern is concerning.",
      "pageTitle": "Left Shift on Blood Smear | Bands, Immature Granulocytes, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1607,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should left shift wording be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Seek prompt medical guidance for left shift with fever and low neutrophils, severe infection symptoms, low blood pressure, confusion, shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, unusual bleeding, low platelets, severe anemia, blasts, Auer rods, possible acute leukemia, very high WBC, or rapidly worsening counts.",
      "pageTitle": "Left Shift on Blood Smear | Bands, Immature Granulocytes, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/left-shift-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1608,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a leukemoid reaction on CBC?",
      "answer": "It is a very high white blood cell pattern, usually with neutrophilia and left shift, that looks reactive rather than like a primary blood cancer.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukemoid Reaction CBC Interpretation | High WBC, Left Shift, and CML Rule-Out",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1609,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "How is it different from CML?",
      "answer": "CML is usually more persistent and more suspicious when basophilia, splenomegaly, or a BCR-ABL1 positive result is present.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukemoid Reaction CBC Interpretation | High WBC, Left Shift, and CML Rule-Out",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1610,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can infection or inflammation cause it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Severe infection, inflammation, tissue injury, and other strong physiologic stressors are common causes of a leukemoid pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukemoid Reaction CBC Interpretation | High WBC, Left Shift, and CML Rule-Out",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1611,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can medicines cause it?",
      "answer": "Yes. Steroids and growth-factor medicines can shift the white-cell count and sometimes produce a dramatic reactive pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukemoid Reaction CBC Interpretation | High WBC, Left Shift, and CML Rule-Out",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1612,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What clues make CML more concerning?",
      "answer": "Basophilia, persistent leukocytosis, splenomegaly, and a pattern that does not improve when the trigger improves can all raise concern for CML.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukemoid Reaction CBC Interpretation | High WBC, Left Shift, and CML Rule-Out",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1613,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What test often helps rule out CML?",
      "answer": "A BCR-ABL1 genetic test or equivalent hematology workup is often used when the CBC pattern needs a more specific leukemia check.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukemoid Reaction CBC Interpretation | High WBC, Left Shift, and CML Rule-Out",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukemoid-reaction-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1614,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does leukoerythroblastic mean on a smear?",
      "answer": "A leukoerythroblastic smear means immature white cells and immature red cells are appearing in the bloodstream together. It is a pattern, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukoerythroblastic Blood Smear | NRBCs, Immature Granulocytes, Teardrop Cells, Marrow Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1615,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a leukoerythroblastic pattern mean cancer?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. It can happen with severe infection, major marrow stress, bleeding, hypoxia, recovery states, marrow fibrosis, or marrow infiltration. Persistent or unexplained patterns need clinician review.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukoerythroblastic Blood Smear | NRBCs, Immature Granulocytes, Teardrop Cells, Marrow Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1616,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is NRBC the same as leukoerythroblastic?",
      "answer": "No. NRBCs are one piece of the pattern. Leukoerythroblastic wording usually means NRBCs plus immature white cells are seen together, sometimes with teardrop cells or other marrow-stress clues.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukoerythroblastic Blood Smear | NRBCs, Immature Granulocytes, Teardrop Cells, Marrow Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1617,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What conditions can cause a leukoerythroblastic smear?",
      "answer": "Common causes include severe anemia, blood loss, hemolysis, hypoxia, serious infection, marrow recovery, marrow fibrosis, and marrow infiltration by cancer or other disease. Newborn physiology is a separate context.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukoerythroblastic Blood Smear | NRBCs, Immature Granulocytes, Teardrop Cells, Marrow Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1618,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual smear review, reticulocyte count, anemia or hemolysis testing, oxygen or bleeding assessment when relevant, and hematology review if the pattern is persistent or unexplained.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukoerythroblastic Blood Smear | NRBCs, Immature Granulocytes, Teardrop Cells, Marrow Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1619,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should a leukoerythroblastic pattern be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Prompt guidance is important if it appears with severe shortness of breath, chest pain, bleeding, low oxygen, jaundice, fever, confusion, very low hemoglobin, low platelets, blasts, or other signs of critical illness or marrow infiltration.",
      "pageTitle": "Leukoerythroblastic Blood Smear | NRBCs, Immature Granulocytes, Teardrop Cells, Marrow Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/leukoerythroblastic-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1620,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a lipid panel measure?",
      "answer": "A lipid panel commonly measures total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and triglycerides. Some reports also include non-HDL cholesterol or calculated values based on the measured numbers.",
      "pageTitle": "Lipid Panel Guide | LDL, HDL, Triglycerides, Non-HDL, Fasting, and Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1621,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do you need to fast for a lipid panel?",
      "answer": "You may need to fast for 8 to 12 hours before a cholesterol test, especially when triglycerides or calculated LDL interpretation matters. Follow the ordering clinician's or lab's instructions.",
      "pageTitle": "Lipid Panel Guide | LDL, HDL, Triglycerides, Non-HDL, Fasting, and Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1622,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are cholesterol numbers enough to decide treatment?",
      "answer": "No. Cholesterol numbers are interpreted with overall cardiovascular risk, including age, blood pressure, diabetes, smoking, family history, prior cardiovascular disease, medications, and sometimes additional tests such as ApoB, lipoprotein(a), or coronary artery calcium imaging.",
      "pageTitle": "Lipid Panel Guide | LDL, HDL, Triglycerides, Non-HDL, Fasting, and Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lipid-panel-cholesterol-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1623,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is FIB-4 used for?",
      "answer": "FIB-4 uses age, AST, ALT, and platelets to estimate the chance of advanced liver fibrosis and decide whether more testing is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Liver fibrosis blood tests and FIB-4 interpretation | AST, ALT, platelets, age, and elastography",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1624,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What do low, indeterminate, and high FIB-4 results mean?",
      "answer": "A low result usually suggests advanced fibrosis is unlikely, an indeterminate result needs another test, and a high result raises concern for further fibrosis assessment.",
      "pageTitle": "Liver fibrosis blood tests and FIB-4 interpretation | AST, ALT, platelets, age, and elastography",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1625,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can normal AST and ALT rule out fibrosis?",
      "answer": "No. Normal liver enzymes do not exclude fibrosis, which is why simple scores and elastography are used together.",
      "pageTitle": "Liver fibrosis blood tests and FIB-4 interpretation | AST, ALT, platelets, age, and elastography",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1626,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does age matter so much in FIB-4?",
      "answer": "Age is part of the formula, so older adults can score higher even when disease is not advanced. AASLD notes age-related caveats, especially under 35 and over 65.",
      "pageTitle": "Liver fibrosis blood tests and FIB-4 interpretation | AST, ALT, platelets, age, and elastography",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1627,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What test often comes after FIB-4?",
      "answer": "Elastography is a common next step when the score is indeterminate or high because it measures liver stiffness more directly.",
      "pageTitle": "Liver fibrosis blood tests and FIB-4 interpretation | AST, ALT, platelets, age, and elastography",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1628,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can FIB-4 diagnose cirrhosis by itself?",
      "answer": "No. It is a triage tool, not a biopsy replacement or a standalone cirrhosis diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Liver fibrosis blood tests and FIB-4 interpretation | AST, ALT, platelets, age, and elastography",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-fibrosis-blood-tests-fib-4.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1629,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do liver function tests measure?",
      "answer": "Liver function tests are blood tests that measure several liver-related substances, commonly including proteins such as albumin, enzymes such as ALT, AST, ALP, and GGT, bilirubin, and sometimes prothrombin time.",
      "pageTitle": "Liver Function Tests | ALT, AST, ALP, Bilirubin, Albumin, and LFT Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-function-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/liver-function-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-function-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1630,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can liver function tests diagnose liver disease?",
      "answer": "Liver function tests can show patterns that may suggest liver inflammation, bile duct problems, medication effects, or liver function changes, but abnormal results usually need clinical context and sometimes more testing to identify the cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Liver Function Tests | ALT, AST, ALP, Bilirubin, Albumin, and LFT Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-function-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/liver-function-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/liver-function-tests.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1631,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is the blood draw time so important?",
      "answer": "Loa loa microfilariae are more likely to be found in daytime blood, so the smear should be timed carefully.",
      "pageTitle": "Loa loa Blood Smear Testing | Loiasis, Microfilariae Timing, West and Central Africa Exposure, and Eosinophils",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1632,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a blood smear miss infection?",
      "answer": "Yes, especially when the microfilarial burden is low, but CDC notes concentration methods or other testing can improve yield.",
      "pageTitle": "Loa loa Blood Smear Testing | Loiasis, Microfilariae Timing, West and Central Africa Exposure, and Eosinophils",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1633,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can an antibody test prove active infection?",
      "answer": "Not reliably by itself. Antibody tests mainly show exposure and may not confirm active disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Loa loa Blood Smear Testing | Loiasis, Microfilariae Timing, West and Central Africa Exposure, and Eosinophils",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1634,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does microfilarial load matter?",
      "answer": "Higher loads increase the risk of severe complications during treatment, so quantification helps guide care.",
      "pageTitle": "Loa loa Blood Smear Testing | Loiasis, Microfilariae Timing, West and Central Africa Exposure, and Eosinophils",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1635,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why should treatment be expert-guided?",
      "answer": "Loa loa treatment can cause serious adverse neurologic events, so CDC recommends expert input.",
      "pageTitle": "Loa loa Blood Smear Testing | Loiasis, Microfilariae Timing, West and Central Africa Exposure, and Eosinophils",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1636,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician familiar with tropical medicine or infectious disease can decide whether additional testing or treatment planning is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Loa loa Blood Smear Testing | Loiasis, Microfilariae Timing, West and Central Africa Exposure, and Eosinophils",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/loa-loa-blood-smear-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1637,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can long QT syndrome be diagnosed by genetic testing alone?",
      "answer": "No. Genetic testing supports the diagnosis, but ECG findings, symptoms, family history, and variant interpretation all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Long QT syndrome genetic testing | ECG, family screening, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1638,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a negative result mean?",
      "answer": "It lowers the chance of a known inherited cause, but it does not rule out acquired long QT or every inherited arrhythmia pathway.",
      "pageTitle": "Long QT syndrome genetic testing | ECG, family screening, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1639,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do relatives need testing?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic family variant is found, relatives can have targeted testing and ECG follow-up instead of a broad panel with more ambiguity.",
      "pageTitle": "Long QT syndrome genetic testing | ECG, family screening, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1640,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do medicines matter?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some drugs prolong the QT interval and can make a borderline ECG more dangerous, especially with low potassium or magnesium.",
      "pageTitle": "Long QT syndrome genetic testing | ECG, family screening, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1641,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can an ECG be normal in long QT syndrome?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some inherited cases have intermittent or subtle QT changes, so family history and genetics can still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Long QT syndrome genetic testing | ECG, family screening, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1642,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "Cardiology and genetics teams usually interpret the result together because the variant alone does not tell the whole story.",
      "pageTitle": "Long QT syndrome genetic testing | ECG, family screening, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/long-qt-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1643,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is lupus anticoagulant the same as lupus?",
      "answer": "No. It is an antibody pattern tied to antiphospholipid syndrome, not a general test for systemic lupus erythematosus.",
      "pageTitle": "Lupus Anticoagulant Testing | APS, dRVVT, aPTT, Clots, Pregnancy Loss, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1644,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What tests are usually included?",
      "answer": "dRVVT and aPTT-based assays are common, often with mixing and confirmatory steps. The broader APS panel also includes anticardiolipin and anti-beta-2 glycoprotein I antibodies.",
      "pageTitle": "Lupus Anticoagulant Testing | APS, dRVVT, aPTT, Clots, Pregnancy Loss, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1645,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is repeat testing needed?",
      "answer": "A positive result needs to persist over time to support APS classification. Temporary antibodies can show up with illness or inflammation and then disappear.",
      "pageTitle": "Lupus Anticoagulant Testing | APS, dRVVT, aPTT, Clots, Pregnancy Loss, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1646,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can blood thinners affect the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Warfarin, heparin, and direct oral anticoagulants can interfere with clot-based assays and complicate interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Lupus Anticoagulant Testing | APS, dRVVT, aPTT, Clots, Pregnancy Loss, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1647,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can you have lupus anticoagulant without APS?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some people have the antibody pattern without a clot or pregnancy complication, which means they do not automatically meet APS criteria.",
      "pageTitle": "Lupus Anticoagulant Testing | APS, dRVVT, aPTT, Clots, Pregnancy Loss, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1648,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What makes the result clinically important?",
      "answer": "The result matters most when it matches a real clot, recurrent pregnancy loss, or another APS feature and stays positive on repeat testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Lupus Anticoagulant Testing | APS, dRVVT, aPTT, Clots, Pregnancy Loss, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lupus-anticoagulant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1649,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high lymphocyte count mean?",
      "answer": "A high lymphocyte count is called lymphocytosis. It means the absolute number of lymphocytes is above the lab's expected range. Viral illness, some chronic infections, immune stimulation, smoking, spleen-related conditions, and some blood or lymph disorders can be possible contexts.",
      "pageTitle": "High Lymphocyte Count | Lymphocytosis, ALC, Viral Illness, CLL, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1650,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does the absolute lymphocyte count matter?",
      "answer": "The absolute lymphocyte count, or ALC, shows how many lymphocytes are actually present. The percentage alone can look high when another white cell type is low, so clinicians usually interpret the absolute count, total WBC, symptoms, and trend together.",
      "pageTitle": "High Lymphocyte Count | Lymphocytosis, ALC, Viral Illness, CLL, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1651,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a virus cause high lymphocytes?",
      "answer": "Yes. Reactive lymphocytosis can occur with viral illnesses and some other infections. A short-lived high lymphocyte count during or after illness is interpreted differently from a persistent, rising, or unexplained elevation.",
      "pageTitle": "High Lymphocyte Count | Lymphocytosis, ALC, Viral Illness, CLL, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1652,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does high lymphocytes mean leukemia?",
      "answer": "Usually no single CBC result proves leukemia. Persistent lymphocytosis in an adult can raise questions about chronic lymphocytic leukemia or related conditions, especially when paired with lymph node swelling, spleen enlargement, anemia, platelet changes, smudge cells, abnormal lymphocytes, or concerning symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "High Lymphocyte Count | Lymphocytosis, ALC, Viral Illness, CLL, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1653,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What are reactive or atypical lymphocytes?",
      "answer": "Reactive or atypical lymphocytes are lymphocytes whose appearance has changed, often in response to infection or immune stimulation. The wording matters because some reports use abnormal, atypical, reactive, immature, or blast-like language differently, and smear review may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "High Lymphocyte Count | Lymphocytosis, ALC, Viral Illness, CLL, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1654,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should high lymphocytes be followed up quickly?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up is important when the count is very high, rising, persistent, paired with blasts or concerning smear comments, or accompanied by unexplained fever, drenching night sweats, weight loss, enlarged lymph nodes, spleen enlargement, frequent infections, fatigue, easy bruising, anemia, or low platelets.",
      "pageTitle": "High Lymphocyte Count | Lymphocytosis, ALC, Viral Illness, CLL, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1655,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a low lymphocyte count mean?",
      "answer": "A low lymphocyte count is called lymphopenia or lymphocytopenia. It means the absolute number of lymphocytes is below the lab's expected range. It can be temporary after illness or stress, or related to infection, medicines, immune suppression, cancer treatment, autoimmune disease, nutrition problems, or inherited immune conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Lymphocyte Count | Lymphopenia, ALC, Infection Risk, HIV, Steroids, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1656,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does the absolute lymphocyte count matter?",
      "answer": "The absolute lymphocyte count, or ALC, shows how many lymphocytes are actually present. A low percentage alone can be misleading when another white blood cell type is high, so the ALC, total WBC, symptoms, and trend matter more than the percentage by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Lymphocyte Count | Lymphopenia, ALC, Infection Risk, HIV, Steroids, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1657,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can steroids cause low lymphocytes?",
      "answer": "Yes. Corticosteroid medicines and other immune-suppressing treatments can lower lymphocyte counts. Timing, dose, duration, and whether the count improves after the exposure changes are important follow-up clues.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Lymphocyte Count | Lymphopenia, ALC, Infection Risk, HIV, Steroids, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1658,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does low lymphocytes mean HIV?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. HIV is one possible cause of lymphopenia, but low lymphocytes can have many causes. HIV testing is considered based on exposure risk, symptoms, routine screening recommendations, and clinician judgment.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Lymphocyte Count | Lymphopenia, ALC, Infection Risk, HIV, Steroids, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1659,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When are low lymphocytes concerning?",
      "answer": "Low lymphocytes deserve closer follow-up when the count is severe, persistent, worsening, paired with other CBC abnormalities, or associated with frequent, severe, recurrent, or unusual infections, unexplained fever, weight loss, swollen lymph nodes, or immune-suppressing medicines.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Lymphocyte Count | Lymphopenia, ALC, Infection Risk, HIV, Steroids, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1660,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may follow a low lymphocyte count?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include a repeat CBC with differential, review of prior CBC trends, medication review, infection evaluation, HIV testing when appropriate, lymphocyte subset testing such as CD4 and CD8 counts, immunoglobulin testing, or referral to hematology or immunology depending on the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Lymphocyte Count | Lymphopenia, ALC, Infection Risk, HIV, Steroids, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lymphocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1661,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Lynch syndrome genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for inherited changes in mismatch repair genes such as MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, or EPCAM that can raise cancer risk for the person and relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "Lynch Syndrome Genetic Testing | Tumor Screening, Germline Testing, and Cascade Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1662,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is tumor screening the same as germline testing?",
      "answer": "No. Tumor screening looks at the cancer tissue, while germline testing looks for inherited DNA changes in blood, saliva, or another normal sample.",
      "pageTitle": "Lynch Syndrome Genetic Testing | Tumor Screening, Germline Testing, and Cascade Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1663,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Which genes are usually involved?",
      "answer": "The classic Lynch syndrome genes are MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, and EPCAM, although the exact panel can vary by lab and clinical situation.",
      "pageTitle": "Lynch Syndrome Genetic Testing | Tumor Screening, Germline Testing, and Cascade Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1664,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out Lynch syndrome?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative result can still leave family-history concern, incomplete tumor follow-up, or a variant not covered by the test.",
      "pageTitle": "Lynch Syndrome Genetic Testing | Tumor Screening, Germline Testing, and Cascade Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1665,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who should be tested first when possible?",
      "answer": "When possible, testing should start with the relative who has had cancer, because that often gives the clearest answer for the family.",
      "pageTitle": "Lynch Syndrome Genetic Testing | Tumor Screening, Germline Testing, and Cascade Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1666,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why is genetic counseling useful?",
      "answer": "Counseling helps connect the result to colon, endometrial, ovarian, and other cancer screening, plus whether relatives should have cascade testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Lynch Syndrome Genetic Testing | Tumor Screening, Germline Testing, and Cascade Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/lynch-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1667,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a magnesium blood test measure?",
      "answer": "It measures magnesium in blood, usually serum or plasma, which is only a small fraction of total body magnesium.",
      "pageTitle": "Magnesium Blood Test | Serum Magnesium, Kidney Function, Supplements, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1668,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a normal magnesium result rule out deficiency?",
      "answer": "Not perfectly. Serum magnesium can look normal even when the broader body story is not fully normal.",
      "pageTitle": "Magnesium Blood Test | Serum Magnesium, Kidney Function, Supplements, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1669,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What causes low magnesium most often?",
      "answer": "Common causes include diarrhea, kidney losses, alcohol use, malabsorption, and certain medicines.",
      "pageTitle": "Magnesium Blood Test | Serum Magnesium, Kidney Function, Supplements, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1670,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What causes high magnesium most often?",
      "answer": "Kidney failure and too much magnesium from supplements, laxatives, antacids, or medicines are the usual culprits.",
      "pageTitle": "Magnesium Blood Test | Serum Magnesium, Kidney Function, Supplements, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1671,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is RBC magnesium better than serum magnesium?",
      "answer": "It may add information in some settings, but it is less standardized for routine use and should not be treated as a universal wellness score.",
      "pageTitle": "Magnesium Blood Test | Serum Magnesium, Kidney Function, Supplements, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1672,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should be checked with magnesium?",
      "answer": "Kidney function, calcium, potassium, medication list, and symptoms often tell the real story.",
      "pageTitle": "Magnesium Blood Test | Serum Magnesium, Kidney Function, Supplements, and Interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/magnesium-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1673,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can Marfan syndrome be diagnosed by genetic testing alone?",
      "answer": "No. The diagnosis usually combines genetic findings with clinical features, imaging, eye findings, and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "Marfan syndrome genetic testing | FBN1, aorta screening, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1674,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a positive FBN1 result mean?",
      "answer": "It can strongly support Marfan syndrome or a related connective-tissue disorder, but the exact variant and the clinical picture still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Marfan syndrome genetic testing | FBN1, aorta screening, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1675,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What if testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative result does not rule out a heritable aortopathy if the features fit. It may just mean the causal change was not found.",
      "pageTitle": "Marfan syndrome genetic testing | FBN1, aorta screening, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1676,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do relatives need screening?",
      "answer": "If a familial variant is known, relatives can get targeted testing and aortic surveillance instead of guessing from symptoms alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Marfan syndrome genetic testing | FBN1, aorta screening, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1677,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why is the aorta such a big deal?",
      "answer": "The main medical risk is aortic enlargement and dissection, so imaging and specialist follow-up are central to care.",
      "pageTitle": "Marfan syndrome genetic testing | FBN1, aorta screening, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1678,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can a broad panel be better than one gene?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, especially when the phenotype is not classic, but broader panels can also create more uncertain results.",
      "pageTitle": "Marfan syndrome genetic testing | FBN1, aorta screening, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/marfan-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1679,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is MAX a hereditary cancer gene?",
      "answer": "It can be. MAX is one of the germline genes associated with hereditary pheochromocytoma and paraganglioma syndromes, so a pathogenic result can matter for both the patient and relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "MAX hereditary paraganglioma genetic testing | Pheochromocytoma, cluster 2, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1680,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is MAX more often pheochromocytoma or paraganglioma?",
      "answer": "Published summaries say MAX is most commonly linked to pheochromocytoma, although paragangliomas can also occur. The tumor location and hormone pattern still need to be read with the gene result.",
      "pageTitle": "MAX hereditary paraganglioma genetic testing | Pheochromocytoma, cluster 2, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1681,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative MAX result rule out inherited PPGL?",
      "answer": "No. Other susceptibility genes can explain the same tumor pattern, and some families remain gene-negative on current testing. Clinical follow-up still depends on the tumor picture.",
      "pageTitle": "MAX hereditary paraganglioma genetic testing | Pheochromocytoma, cluster 2, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1682,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if MAX is reported as a VUS?",
      "answer": "A VUS does not confirm the diagnosis and should not be used by itself to change major medical decisions. It usually means the lab and clinician need more context before the result is acted on.",
      "pageTitle": "MAX hereditary paraganglioma genetic testing | Pheochromocytoma, cluster 2, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1683,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do relatives need testing if MAX is positive?",
      "answer": "Often yes, starting with first-degree relatives. Targeted testing for the known family variant is usually more useful than broad panel testing for every relative.",
      "pageTitle": "MAX hereditary paraganglioma genetic testing | Pheochromocytoma, cluster 2, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1684,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up tests are usually used?",
      "answer": "Biochemical testing with plasma or urine metanephrines and imaging remain central. Genetic testing adds inherited-risk context, but it does not replace the tumor workup.",
      "pageTitle": "MAX hereditary paraganglioma genetic testing | Pheochromocytoma, cluster 2, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/max-hereditary-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1685,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does MECOM genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for germline MECOM variants that can explain inherited bone marrow failure, congenital thrombocytopenia, radioulnar synostosis, or other syndromic clues that change family and donor planning.",
      "pageTitle": "MECOM Genetic Testing | Inherited Bone Marrow Failure, Thrombocytopenia, Congenital Features, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1686,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does MECOM come up in marrow failure workups?",
      "answer": "MECOM is one of the genes linked to inherited marrow failure syndromes, especially when platelet production is poor and the pattern starts in childhood or has congenital features.",
      "pageTitle": "MECOM Genetic Testing | Inherited Bone Marrow Failure, Thrombocytopenia, Congenital Features, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1687,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can MECOM appear on tumor or marrow testing instead of germline testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. MECOM can be part of acquired leukemia biology, so a finding on tumor or marrow sequencing does not automatically prove inherited disease.",
      "pageTitle": "MECOM Genetic Testing | Inherited Bone Marrow Failure, Thrombocytopenia, Congenital Features, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1688,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why can specimen type change the interpretation?",
      "answer": "If the blood or marrow already contains a disease clone, that sample may not reflect inherited DNA cleanly. Genetics teams may need a non-blood confirmation strategy.",
      "pageTitle": "MECOM Genetic Testing | Inherited Bone Marrow Failure, Thrombocytopenia, Congenital Features, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1689,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does a negative MECOM result mean?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance that MECOM explains the pattern, but it does not rule out other inherited marrow-failure genes or non-genetic causes of cytopenias.",
      "pageTitle": "MECOM Genetic Testing | Inherited Bone Marrow Failure, Thrombocytopenia, Congenital Features, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1690,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why do donor questions matter?",
      "answer": "If the variant is germline, relatives or related stem-cell donors may also carry it, which can affect transplant planning and family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "MECOM Genetic Testing | Inherited Bone Marrow Failure, Thrombocytopenia, Congenital Features, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mecom-genetic-testing-inherited-marrow-failure.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1691,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does medullary thyroid cancer always mean MEN2?",
      "answer": "No. Medullary thyroid cancer can be sporadic or hereditary, so the RET result and family history are what help sort that out.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer Genetic Counseling Questions | RET Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, Calcitonin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1692,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is RET testing done on blood or tumor?",
      "answer": "It can be either. Blood or saliva is usually germline testing, while tumor testing looks at the cancer itself and may not answer inherited-risk questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer Genetic Counseling Questions | RET Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, Calcitonin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1693,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do calcitonin and pheochromocytoma questions matter?",
      "answer": "Calcitonin helps with medullary thyroid cancer follow-up, and MEN2 can also involve adrenal tumors, so the counseling plan should not stop at the thyroid.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer Genetic Counseling Questions | RET Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, Calcitonin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1694,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should my relatives be tested too?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic or likely pathogenic familial RET variant is found, targeted family testing is usually the key next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer Genetic Counseling Questions | RET Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, Calcitonin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1695,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the RET result is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative germline RET result lowers inherited MEN2 concern, but the clinician may still use pathology, calcitonin, imaging, and family history to decide follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer Genetic Counseling Questions | RET Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, Calcitonin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1696,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What does a RET VUS mean?",
      "answer": "A variant of uncertain significance is not the same as a confirmed MEN2-causing change, so it should not be treated like a positive family variant unless the lab later reclassifies it.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer Genetic Counseling Questions | RET Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, Calcitonin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-genetic-counseling-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1697,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What should I check first in a RET report?",
      "answer": "Check whether the test is germline, tumor-only, or paired tumor-normal, because those three report types answer different questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer RET Result Routing | Negative Germline, VUS, Tumor-Only, Paired Testing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1698,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative germline RET result rule out MEN2?",
      "answer": "It lowers inherited RET-related MEN2 concern, but the exact assay scope, the clinical picture, and the family history still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer RET Result Routing | Negative Germline, VUS, Tumor-Only, Paired Testing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1699,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a RET VUS mean here?",
      "answer": "A variant of uncertain significance is not a confirmed MEN2 result and usually should not be used for family cascade testing unless it is reclassified later.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer RET Result Routing | Negative Germline, VUS, Tumor-Only, Paired Testing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1700,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does tumor-only RET testing not settle family risk?",
      "answer": "Tumor-only testing can find somatic changes in the cancer, but it does not prove whether the same change is present in normal cells and could be inherited.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer RET Result Routing | Negative Germline, VUS, Tumor-Only, Paired Testing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1701,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a family variant be tested in children?",
      "answer": "Yes, when the known family RET variant changes childhood screening or preventive timing, children may need targeted testing earlier than many other genetic conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer RET Result Routing | Negative Germline, VUS, Tumor-Only, Paired Testing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1702,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should a genetics team get involved?",
      "answer": "Genetics review is useful when the report is unclear, when the assay may have been limited, or when the result changes family testing, thyroid surgery timing, or adrenal screening.",
      "pageTitle": "Medullary Thyroid Cancer RET Result Routing | Negative Germline, VUS, Tumor-Only, Paired Testing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/medullary-thyroid-cancer-ret-result-routing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1703,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does MEN1 genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for inherited variants in the MEN1 gene that can explain a pattern of parathyroid, pituitary, and pancreatic or duodenal endocrine tumors.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN1 Genetic Testing | Parathyroid, Pituitary, Pancreatic NETs, Family Screening, and Deletion Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1704,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out MEN1?",
      "answer": "No. A negative result lowers the chance, but it does not fully rule it out if the phenotype is strong or if deletion/duplication analysis was missing.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN1 Genetic Testing | Parathyroid, Pituitary, Pancreatic NETs, Family Screening, and Deletion Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1705,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does deletion/duplication analysis matter?",
      "answer": "Some clinically important MEN1 changes are not simple sequence variants, so a sequence-only test can miss them.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN1 Genetic Testing | Parathyroid, Pituitary, Pancreatic NETs, Family Screening, and Deletion Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1706,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can MEN1 be diagnosed without genetic testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. NIDDK says MEN1 can be diagnosed clinically when the tumor pattern or a known family diagnosis is present, but genetic testing helps clarify family risk.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN1 Genetic Testing | Parathyroid, Pituitary, Pancreatic NETs, Family Screening, and Deletion Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1707,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic familial variant is found, first-degree relatives are usually the first people offered targeted testing and surveillance planning.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN1 Genetic Testing | Parathyroid, Pituitary, Pancreatic NETs, Family Screening, and Deletion Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1708,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why do children come up in MEN1 counseling?",
      "answer": "NIDDK notes that targeted testing for a known familial variant may be appropriate starting around age 5, because MEN1 can appear in childhood in rare cases.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN1 Genetic Testing | Parathyroid, Pituitary, Pancreatic NETs, Family Screening, and Deletion Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1709,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the difference between family testing and surveillance?",
      "answer": "Family testing asks who has the known RET variant. Surveillance asks what medical monitoring or prevention plan a positive person needs.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Testing and Surveillance Roadmap | RET Variants, Relatives, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1710,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Who usually needs targeted family testing?",
      "answer": "Relatives at risk for the known familial RET variant usually need targeted testing rather than a broad screen.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Testing and Surveillance Roadmap | RET Variants, Relatives, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1711,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do children need special timing?",
      "answer": "MEN2 timing can be age- and variant-specific, so pediatric genetics and endocrine planning matter.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Testing and Surveillance Roadmap | RET Variants, Relatives, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1712,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative relative still need follow-up?",
      "answer": "If the family variant is known and the relative tests negative for that exact variant, surveillance usually changes, but the family plan should still be confirmed by the specialist.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Testing and Surveillance Roadmap | RET Variants, Relatives, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1713,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should the family letter include the exact variant?",
      "answer": "Yes. The exact variant is what helps relatives request the right targeted test.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Testing and Surveillance Roadmap | RET Variants, Relatives, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1714,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the result is uncertain or tumor-only?",
      "answer": "Uncertain or tumor-only findings should not be treated as a finished family testing plan without genetics review.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Testing and Surveillance Roadmap | RET Variants, Relatives, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-testing-surveillance-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1715,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is MEN2 family variant testing?",
      "answer": "It is targeted testing for the exact known RET variant already identified in the family, not broad tumor sequencing or a different gene panel.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Variant Testing | RET Pathogenic Variant, Relatives, Cascade Testing, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1716,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Who should usually be tested first?",
      "answer": "Usually the relative most likely to have inherited the known familial RET variant is tested first, then cascade testing expands to other at-risk relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Variant Testing | RET Pathogenic Variant, Relatives, Cascade Testing, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1717,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can children be tested for a family RET variant?",
      "answer": "Yes, when the family variant changes childhood MEN2 timing or preventive planning, testing can be appropriate much earlier than in many other genetic conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Variant Testing | RET Pathogenic Variant, Relatives, Cascade Testing, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1718,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative test rule out MEN2?",
      "answer": "A true negative for the known family variant lowers inherited MEN2 risk for that variant, but the genetics team still checks whether any other testing or surveillance is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Variant Testing | RET Pathogenic Variant, Relatives, Cascade Testing, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1719,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does a RET VUS mean in a family?",
      "answer": "A variant of uncertain significance is not a confirmed family risk result, so it should not be treated like a pathogenic RET variant unless the lab later reclassifies it.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Variant Testing | RET Pathogenic Variant, Relatives, Cascade Testing, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1720,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why do sample type and exact wording matter?",
      "answer": "Blood or saliva usually means germline testing, while tumor-only testing can find somatic changes that do not answer the inherited family-risk question.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Family Variant Testing | RET Pathogenic Variant, Relatives, Cascade Testing, Children, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-family-variant-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1721,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is MEN2 surveillance not one generic checklist?",
      "answer": "Because the exact RET variant, age, family history, and prior findings change what surveillance is needed and when it should happen.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Surveillance After Positive RET Testing | Calcitonin, Pheochromocytoma, Parathyroid, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1722,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the first thing to check after a positive RET result?",
      "answer": "Check whether the result is germline or tumor-only, then confirm the exact variant before making surveillance decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Surveillance After Positive RET Testing | Calcitonin, Pheochromocytoma, Parathyroid, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1723,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does calcitonin tell the team?",
      "answer": "Calcitonin helps the team think about medullary thyroid cancer risk and thyroid timing, but it needs to be interpreted with the RET variant and the clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Surveillance After Positive RET Testing | Calcitonin, Pheochromocytoma, Parathyroid, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1724,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does pheochromocytoma screening matter before procedures?",
      "answer": "An unrecognized pheochromocytoma can create major surgical and blood-pressure risk, so adrenal screening can be important before some interventions.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Surveillance After Positive RET Testing | Calcitonin, Pheochromocytoma, Parathyroid, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1725,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a positive RET result change family testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. It usually triggers cascade testing so relatives who may carry the same family variant can be identified and counseled.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Surveillance After Positive RET Testing | Calcitonin, Pheochromocytoma, Parathyroid, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1726,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should coordinate follow-up?",
      "answer": "Genetics, endocrinology, and sometimes endocrine surgery usually coordinate the plan so the result turns into actual surveillance.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2 Surveillance After Positive RET Testing | Calcitonin, Pheochromocytoma, Parathyroid, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2-surveillance-after-positive-ret-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1727,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main difference between MEN2A and MEN2B?",
      "answer": "Both are RET syndromes, but MEN2A is more associated with medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, and sometimes parathyroid disease, while MEN2B is more associated with early aggressive medullary thyroid cancer, mucosal neuromas, and marfanoid features.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2A vs MEN2B genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1728,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is MEN2A more likely?",
      "answer": "MEN2A is more likely when medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, or parathyroid disease is the main pattern and the family history fits a RET syndrome without the classic MEN2B physical features.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2A vs MEN2B genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1729,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is MEN2B more likely?",
      "answer": "MEN2B is more likely when medullary thyroid cancer appears very early and the person has mucosal neuromas, thickened lips, medullated corneal nerves, or a marfanoid habitus.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2A vs MEN2B genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1730,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative RET result rule out MEN2?",
      "answer": "No. A negative RET result does not fully settle the question if the clinical picture is still convincing, because test coverage, variant type, or interpretation issues may matter. A genetics specialist should review the exact assay and phenotype.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2A vs MEN2B genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1731,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested if one RET variant is positive?",
      "answer": "Yes. First-degree relatives are often offered targeted testing for the known family variant, because that result can change thyroid and adrenal surveillance timing.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2A vs MEN2B genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1732,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up tests matter after either result?",
      "answer": "Calcitonin, thyroid ultrasound, calcium or parathyroid hormone, and metanephrines may all matter depending on the phenotype. The variant and the family pattern should guide follow-up, not the gene name alone.",
      "pageTitle": "MEN2A vs MEN2B genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/men2a-vs-men2b-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1733,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a metabolic cart actually measure?",
      "answer": "It measures oxygen use and carbon dioxide production during rest or exercise, which can be used to estimate resting metabolic rate, fuel use, or exercise capacity depending on the protocol.",
      "pageTitle": "Metabolic Cart Testing | resting metabolic rate, VO2, CO2, and fitness testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1734,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a metabolic cart the same as VO2 max testing?",
      "answer": "Not always. VO2 max testing is one possible use of a metabolic cart, but the same equipment can also be used for resting metabolic rate or other exercise protocols.",
      "pageTitle": "Metabolic Cart Testing | resting metabolic rate, VO2, CO2, and fitness testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1735,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does preparation matter so much?",
      "answer": "Food, caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, sleep, recent exercise, room conditions, and rest period can all change the result, especially for resting metabolic rate.",
      "pageTitle": "Metabolic Cart Testing | resting metabolic rate, VO2, CO2, and fitness testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1736,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can the result guide nutrition or training?",
      "answer": "Yes, if the protocol is good and the question is clear. Resting metabolic rate can inform nutrition planning, and exercise testing can help training zones, but the result should be interpreted in context.",
      "pageTitle": "Metabolic Cart Testing | resting metabolic rate, VO2, CO2, and fitness testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1737,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What can make a wearable estimate seem better than a metabolic cart?",
      "answer": "Wearables can be convenient, but they use indirect assumptions. A metabolic cart is more direct when the equipment is calibrated and the protocol is correct.",
      "pageTitle": "Metabolic Cart Testing | resting metabolic rate, VO2, CO2, and fitness testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1738,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I choose a clinician-supervised test?",
      "answer": "If you have chest pain, fainting, unusual shortness of breath, major changes in exercise tolerance, or a medical decision depends on the result, supervised testing is the safer choice.",
      "pageTitle": "Metabolic Cart Testing | resting metabolic rate, VO2, CO2, and fitness testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metabolic-cart-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1739,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are metamyelocytes on a CBC differential?",
      "answer": "Metamyelocytes are immature neutrophil-line white blood cell precursors. They normally mature in bone marrow after myelocytes and before band neutrophils. When they appear in blood, the result is interpreted with the full CBC, smear review, symptoms, and trend.",
      "pageTitle": "Metamyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Bands, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1740,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can infection cause metamyelocytes in blood?",
      "answer": "Yes. Infection, inflammation, tissue injury, physiologic stress, pregnancy, marrow recovery, corticosteroids, and growth-factor treatment can be associated with a left shift that includes metamyelocytes.",
      "pageTitle": "Metamyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Bands, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1741,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are metamyelocytes the same as bands?",
      "answer": "No. Metamyelocytes are earlier than band neutrophils. Both can be part of a left shift, but metamyelocytes suggest the marrow is releasing cells at a less mature stage than bands alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Metamyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Bands, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1742,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Are metamyelocytes the same as immature granulocytes?",
      "answer": "Metamyelocytes are one type of immature granulocyte. Automated CBC reports may group promyelocytes, myelocytes, and metamyelocytes together as immature granulocytes, while manual differentials may list them separately.",
      "pageTitle": "Metamyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Bands, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1743,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed for metamyelocytes?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual smear review, review of recent infection, inflammation, pregnancy, medication, or treatment context, chemistry tests, and hematology review if the finding is persistent, unexplained, or paired with blasts, anemia, low platelets, or very high WBC.",
      "pageTitle": "Metamyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Bands, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1744,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should metamyelocytes be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Seek prompt medical guidance if metamyelocytes are reported with blasts, Auer rods, promyelocytes, possible acute leukemia, severe infection symptoms, fever with low neutrophils, shortness of breath, confusion, unusual bleeding, low platelets, severe anemia, or a rapidly rising white blood cell count.",
      "pageTitle": "Metamyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Bands, Infection, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/metamyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1745,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is there a universal interval for repeating a microbiome test?",
      "answer": "No. There is no universal evidence-based interval. Retesting only makes sense when it answers a practical question after a defined change.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Retesting Intervals | When to Repeat Gut Tests and What Can Change",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1746,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What changes can affect a repeat result?",
      "answer": "Antibiotics, infection, diet changes, probiotics, prebiotics, postbiotics, illness, travel, bowel habit changes, and sample handling can all shift the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Retesting Intervals | When to Repeat Gut Tests and What Can Change",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1747,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When might retesting be useful?",
      "answer": "Retesting may be useful after a major change that you actually want to evaluate, such as a clinician-directed intervention or a symptom-focused treatment plan.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Retesting Intervals | When to Repeat Gut Tests and What Can Change",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1748,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When does retesting add noise?",
      "answer": "Retesting adds noise when the first result was curiosity only, the company cannot show repeatability, or there is no decision tied to the repeat result.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Retesting Intervals | When to Repeat Gut Tests and What Can Change",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1749,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I retest right after antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Usually not just to chase a score. A repeat test is more useful when you know what question it should answer, or when a clinician is monitoring a specific problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Retesting Intervals | When to Repeat Gut Tests and What Can Change",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1750,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What symptoms mean I should get medical care instead?",
      "answer": "Persistent diarrhea, blood in the stool, fever, dehydration, severe abdominal pain, or worsening symptoms need medical evaluation rather than more microbiome retesting.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Retesting Intervals | When to Repeat Gut Tests and What Can Change",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-retesting-intervals.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1751,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does HIPAA automatically protect a microbiome test?",
      "answer": "Not always. HIPAA applies to covered entities and their business associates, but some direct-to-consumer test companies and health apps may fall outside that framework.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Test Privacy | Samples, Data Sharing, HIPAA, and Deletion Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1752,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can the company keep my sample after I get the report?",
      "answer": "Yes, depending on the policy. Some companies store samples for retesting, quality control, research, or future product development unless you opt out or request deletion.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Test Privacy | Samples, Data Sharing, HIPAA, and Deletion Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1753,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does deleting my account erase everything?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Deletion may not reach backup systems, de-identified records, or data already shared with partners, vendors, or researchers.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Test Privacy | Samples, Data Sharing, HIPAA, and Deletion Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1754,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can the data be shared with other companies?",
      "answer": "It can be, if the privacy policy says so or if the company changes ownership. That is why the policy and consent language matter before you buy.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Test Privacy | Samples, Data Sharing, HIPAA, and Deletion Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1755,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I check before ordering?",
      "answer": "Check who can access the data, whether the sample is stored, how deletion works, whether research use is optional, and whether the company uses outside analytics or advertising tools.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Test Privacy | Samples, Data Sharing, HIPAA, and Deletion Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1756,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should privacy concerns change my testing choice?",
      "answer": "Sometimes. If you would not want the sample, raw data, or app activity stored or shared, a consumer microbiome test may not be the right first step.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Test Privacy | Samples, Data Sharing, HIPAA, and Deletion Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-test-privacy.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1757,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can antibiotics change a microbiome test?",
      "answer": "Yes. Antibiotics can reduce the number and variety of gut microbes, so the test may look different for weeks or longer after treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing After Antibiotics | Recovery, Retesting, and Gut Report Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1758,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Should I retest my microbiome right after antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Only if you have a clear question that the result will change. Otherwise, retesting is often just a snapshot without a practical next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing After Antibiotics | Recovery, Retesting, and Gut Report Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1759,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a microbiome test diagnose C. diff or another infection?",
      "answer": "Not reliably. If you have concerning diarrhea after antibiotics, you usually need a specific stool test ordered for infection rather than a consumer microbiome report.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing After Antibiotics | Recovery, Retesting, and Gut Report Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1760,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do probiotics restore the microbiome?",
      "answer": "Sometimes they may help with antibiotic-associated diarrhea, but evidence is limited for many other claims and product effects can vary.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing After Antibiotics | Recovery, Retesting, and Gut Report Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1761,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "How long does gut recovery take after antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Recovery is variable. CDC notes the effects of antibiotics on the gut microbiome can last for months.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing After Antibiotics | Recovery, Retesting, and Gut Report Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1762,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should symptoms override microbiome curiosity?",
      "answer": "If you have severe, bloody, persistent, or dehydrating diarrhea, fever, or severe abdominal pain, symptoms should be evaluated medically instead of waiting on a consumer report.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing After Antibiotics | Recovery, Retesting, and Gut Report Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-after-antibiotics.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1763,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a microbiome test diagnose gut disease?",
      "answer": "Most consumer microbiome reports should not be treated as a diagnosis. Diagnostic claims should be evaluated separately from general wellness or research-style microbiome information.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing Guide | Gut Reports, Diversity Scores, and Claim Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1764,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a gut microbiome test usually measure?",
      "answer": "Many gut microbiome tests use a stool sample to estimate which microbes or microbial DNA signatures are present, then compare results with a company database or research references.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing Guide | Gut Reports, Diversity Scores, and Claim Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1765,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a higher diversity score always mean better gut health?",
      "answer": "No. Diversity is only one part of the picture, and a higher score by itself does not prove better health, better symptoms, or a lower disease risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing Guide | Gut Reports, Diversity Scores, and Claim Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1766,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can diet, antibiotics, travel, or illness change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. The microbiome can shift with diet, medications, illness, travel, sleep, stress, and sample timing, which is one reason single-test comparisons are hard to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing Guide | Gut Reports, Diversity Scores, and Claim Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1767,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I repeat a microbiome test after probiotics or antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Only if the company explains why repeating the test is meaningful. Without a validated outcome, repeating the test may just measure normal variability instead of real improvement.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing Guide | Gut Reports, Diversity Scores, and Claim Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1768,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do if I have persistent diarrhea, weight loss, blood, fever, or severe pain?",
      "answer": "Those symptoms need clinical evaluation. A consumer microbiome report should not be used to delay care or replace testing for an infection, inflammatory disease, or other urgent cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Microbiome Testing Guide | Gut Reports, Diversity Scores, and Claim Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microbiome-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1769,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "When is microsporidia testing worth considering?",
      "answer": "It is usually a targeted question, not a routine screen. Chronic or unexplained diarrhea, weight loss, eye symptoms, transplant history, advanced HIV, immunosuppression, or an exposure story can make it more relevant.",
      "pageTitle": "Microsporidia stool and PCR testing | Stool stains, PCR, immune status, and species limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1770,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a routine stool ova and parasite exam miss microsporidia?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC notes that special stains and PCR are often needed because routine O&P methods may not be sensitive enough for these very small spores unless the lab is specifically looking for them.",
      "pageTitle": "Microsporidia stool and PCR testing | Stool stains, PCR, immune status, and species limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1771,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the difference between a stool stain and PCR?",
      "answer": "A stool stain is a microscopy-based method that can show spores, while PCR can detect microsporidial DNA and sometimes identify species. The exact value depends on what the lab validates and what species are covered.",
      "pageTitle": "Microsporidia stool and PCR testing | Stool stains, PCR, immune status, and species limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1772,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does immune status matter so much?",
      "answer": "Microsporidia are more likely to cause chronic or disseminated disease in people with advanced immunodeficiency or other immune suppression, so the same stool result can carry a different meaning in a transplant or HIV context than in an otherwise healthy person.",
      "pageTitle": "Microsporidia stool and PCR testing | Stool stains, PCR, immune status, and species limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1773,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if stool testing is negative but suspicion stays high?",
      "answer": "A negative stool test does not always end the workup. Depending on symptoms, clinicians may consider repeat stool testing, a different specimen, or small bowel or tissue evaluation because some cases are diagnosed outside routine stool testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Microsporidia stool and PCR testing | Stool stains, PCR, immune status, and species limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1774,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can microsporidia affect the eye or other organs?",
      "answer": "Yes. Extraintestinal disease can involve the eye, urinary tract, or other sites, which is one reason the specimen type and symptom pattern matter before deciding what to test.",
      "pageTitle": "Microsporidia stool and PCR testing | Stool stains, PCR, immune status, and species limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/microsporidia-stool-pcr-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1775,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a mixing study measure?",
      "answer": "It checks whether a prolonged PT or aPTT corrects when the patient's plasma is mixed with normal plasma. That tells the lab whether a factor deficiency or an inhibitor is more likely.",
      "pageTitle": "Mixing Study Blood Test | Prolonged PT, aPTT, Factor Deficiency, Inhibitors, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1776,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is incubation sometimes used?",
      "answer": "Some inhibitors are time-dependent and become easier to detect after the sample sits with normal plasma. Immediate and incubated results can point in different directions.",
      "pageTitle": "Mixing Study Blood Test | Prolonged PT, aPTT, Factor Deficiency, Inhibitors, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1777,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a mixing study diagnose lupus anticoagulant?",
      "answer": "No. It can suggest an inhibitor pattern, but lupus anticoagulant testing is usually needed to confirm that possibility.",
      "pageTitle": "Mixing Study Blood Test | Prolonged PT, aPTT, Factor Deficiency, Inhibitors, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1778,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does correction mean everything is normal?",
      "answer": "No. It suggests a factor deficiency is more likely, but the exact factor still needs targeted follow-up and the clinical context still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Mixing Study Blood Test | Prolonged PT, aPTT, Factor Deficiency, Inhibitors, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1779,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can medicines change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Heparin, warfarin, and direct oral anticoagulants can all affect clot-based testing and can make interpretation harder.",
      "pageTitle": "Mixing Study Blood Test | Prolonged PT, aPTT, Factor Deficiency, Inhibitors, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1780,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up is common after a noncorrecting mix?",
      "answer": "Common next steps include lupus anticoagulant testing, factor inhibitor testing, anticoagulant review, and hematology interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Mixing Study Blood Test | Prolonged PT, aPTT, Factor Deficiency, Inhibitors, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mixing-study-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1781,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a urine mycotoxin test diagnose mold illness?",
      "answer": "No. CDC has warned that unvalidated urine mycotoxin tests should not be used to diagnose illness, and FDA says direct-to-consumer test results should not be the only basis for medical decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Mold Mycotoxin Urine Test Claims | CDC, FDA, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1782,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can the result tell where the mold is coming from?",
      "answer": "No. A urine result cannot reliably identify whether exposure came from a building, food, or another source.",
      "pageTitle": "Mold Mycotoxin Urine Test Claims | CDC, FDA, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1783,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What should I do if I see visible mold or water damage?",
      "answer": "Fix the moisture problem and clean up the mold. CDC and EPA both emphasize that moisture control and remediation matter more than trying to type the mold first.",
      "pageTitle": "Mold Mycotoxin Urine Test Claims | CDC, FDA, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1784,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should I get medical care instead of another mold test?",
      "answer": "Get medical advice if asthma, allergy symptoms, immune suppression, or breathing problems are part of the picture. Those conditions matter more than a consumer urine panel.",
      "pageTitle": "Mold Mycotoxin Urine Test Claims | CDC, FDA, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1785,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Could food explain a mycotoxin result?",
      "answer": "Yes. FDA notes that mycotoxins are food contaminants as well as environmental ones, so diet can be part of the picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Mold Mycotoxin Urine Test Claims | CDC, FDA, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1786,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Do I need to know the mold species before cleanup?",
      "answer": "Usually no. CDC says mold does not need to be typed before cleanup decisions, because any mold growth points to a moisture problem that should be corrected.",
      "pageTitle": "Mold Mycotoxin Urine Test Claims | CDC, FDA, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mold-mycotoxin-urine-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1787,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does monoblasts on a CBC differential mean?",
      "answer": "Monoblasts are immature cells in the monocyte lineage. They are not a routine peripheral blood finding, so a report mentioning monoblasts should be reviewed with the exact wording, smear or pathology comment, blast percentage, absolute monocyte count, anemia, platelet count, symptoms, and whether urgent hematology follow-up was recommended.",
      "pageTitle": "Monoblasts on CBC Differential | Blasts, Monocytes, AML Clues, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1788,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are monoblasts the same as regular monocytes?",
      "answer": "No. Monocytes are mature white blood cells. Monoblasts are immature precursor cells in the monocyte lineage. Promonocytes sit between monoblasts and mature monocytes and may also matter in leukemia classification.",
      "pageTitle": "Monoblasts on CBC Differential | Blasts, Monocytes, AML Clues, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1789,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does monoblasts on a CBC mean acute myeloid leukemia?",
      "answer": "Not by the word alone, but monoblast wording can raise concern for acute myeloid leukemia with monocytic differentiation or another marrow disorder. Confirmation depends on smear review, flow cytometry, bone marrow findings, cytogenetic and molecular testing, and clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Monoblasts on CBC Differential | Blasts, Monocytes, AML Clues, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1790,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does smear review matter for monoblasts?",
      "answer": "A peripheral smear or hematopathology review helps confirm what the abnormal cells are and whether they are blasts, monoblasts, promonocytes, reactive monocytes, or another immature cell type. Cell identification affects urgency and follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Monoblasts on CBC Differential | Blasts, Monocytes, AML Clues, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1791,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests may follow a monoblast report?",
      "answer": "Depending on the case, follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual smear review, hematopathology review, flow cytometry, bone marrow aspiration or biopsy, cytogenetic testing, FISH, molecular testing, chemistry tests, coagulation tests, and urgent hematology evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Monoblasts on CBC Differential | Blasts, Monocytes, AML Clues, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1792,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should monoblast wording be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Prompt medical follow-up is important if the report mentions monoblasts, blasts, promonocytes, abnormal immature cells, possible acute leukemia, or urgent review, especially with fever, infection, shortness of breath, severe fatigue, bruising, bleeding, anemia, low platelets, low neutrophils, very high or rapidly changing WBC, weight loss, night sweats, or confusion.",
      "pageTitle": "Monoblasts on CBC Differential | Blasts, Monocytes, AML Clues, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monoblasts-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1793,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is monocytosis?",
      "answer": "Monocytosis means the monocyte count is higher than expected. It is a lab finding, not a diagnosis on its own.",
      "pageTitle": "High Monocyte Count Interpretation | Absolute Count, CBC Context, Infection, Inflammation, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1794,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does the absolute monocyte count matter more than the percent?",
      "answer": "The percentage can shift when other white blood cell types move around. The absolute count is usually a better way to judge how much monocytosis is really present.",
      "pageTitle": "High Monocyte Count Interpretation | Absolute Count, CBC Context, Infection, Inflammation, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1795,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What are common reactive causes of high monocytes?",
      "answer": "Infection, inflammation, tissue repair, and recovery from a recent illness are common reactive reasons monocytes may run high.",
      "pageTitle": "High Monocyte Count Interpretation | Absolute Count, CBC Context, Infection, Inflammation, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1796,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is a high monocyte count more concerning?",
      "answer": "Persistence over time, a clearly elevated absolute monocyte count, symptoms such as fever or weight loss, or other CBC abnormalities can make the result more concerning.",
      "pageTitle": "High Monocyte Count Interpretation | Absolute Count, CBC Context, Infection, Inflammation, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1797,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if monocytes are high but the rest of the CBC is normal?",
      "answer": "That pattern is often reactive, but it still deserves context, repeat trends, and symptom review rather than a one-time interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "High Monocyte Count Interpretation | Absolute Count, CBC Context, Infection, Inflammation, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1798,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up tests are often useful?",
      "answer": "A repeat CBC, a peripheral smear, and a clinician review of infection, inflammation, medication, and marrow clues are common next steps.",
      "pageTitle": "High Monocyte Count Interpretation | Absolute Count, CBC Context, Infection, Inflammation, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1799,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is monocytopenia?",
      "answer": "Monocytopenia means the monocyte count is lower than expected. It is a lab finding, not a diagnosis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Monocyte Count Interpretation | Monocytopenia, Absolute Count, White Blood Cells, Immune Context, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1800,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does the absolute monocyte count matter?",
      "answer": "The absolute count is usually more useful than the percentage because the percentage can move around when the other white blood cell types change.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Monocyte Count Interpretation | Monocytopenia, Absolute Count, White Blood Cells, Immune Context, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1801,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What can cause a low monocyte count?",
      "answer": "Medicines, immune suppression, recent severe illness, bone marrow problems, and low overall white blood cell counts can all be part of the picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Monocyte Count Interpretation | Monocytopenia, Absolute Count, White Blood Cells, Immune Context, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1802,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is a mildly low monocyte count always a problem?",
      "answer": "Not always. Mild isolated changes are often less important than persistent low counts or low counts that occur with other CBC abnormalities.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Monocyte Count Interpretation | Monocytopenia, Absolute Count, White Blood Cells, Immune Context, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1803,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is a low monocyte count more concerning?",
      "answer": "It becomes more concerning when it is persistent, very low, or paired with recurrent infections, low white blood cells, or other blood count abnormalities.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Monocyte Count Interpretation | Monocytopenia, Absolute Count, White Blood Cells, Immune Context, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1804,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up is common?",
      "answer": "A repeat CBC, review of medicines and recent illness, and sometimes a peripheral smear or specialist review are common next steps.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Monocyte Count Interpretation | Monocytopenia, Absolute Count, White Blood Cells, Immune Context, Persistence, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/monocyte-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1805,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does mosaic NF1 mean?",
      "answer": "Mosaic NF1 means the NF1 variant is present in some cells but not all cells, so the findings can be localized, mild, or missed by routine blood testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Mosaic NF1 Genetic Testing | Segmental Neurofibromatosis, Tissue Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1806,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can blood testing be negative?",
      "answer": "The variant may be absent or too low-level in blood, especially if the mosaicism is limited to a tissue segment or another cell line.",
      "pageTitle": "Mosaic NF1 Genetic Testing | Segmental Neurofibromatosis, Tissue Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1807,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When should tissue testing be considered?",
      "answer": "Tissue testing can be useful when the physical findings are segmental, when blood testing is negative, or when a tumor or skin lesion is more likely to contain the variant.",
      "pageTitle": "Mosaic NF1 Genetic Testing | Segmental Neurofibromatosis, Tissue Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1808,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a parent with mosaic NF1 pass it on?",
      "answer": "Yes. A parent with mosaic NF1 can sometimes transmit the variant, so family counseling may still matter even if blood testing is negative or subtle.",
      "pageTitle": "Mosaic NF1 Genetic Testing | Segmental Neurofibromatosis, Tissue Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1809,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does mosaic NF1 change surveillance?",
      "answer": "Surveillance is still guided by the clinical findings, but the diagnosis can affect which specialists are involved and how family risk is discussed.",
      "pageTitle": "Mosaic NF1 Genetic Testing | Segmental Neurofibromatosis, Tissue Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1810,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should review the result?",
      "answer": "A genetics professional is often helpful because tissue choice, low-level mosaicism, and family implications can be easy to misread without context.",
      "pageTitle": "Mosaic NF1 Genetic Testing | Segmental Neurofibromatosis, Tissue Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mosaic-nf1-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1811,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should MTHFR be ordered for blood clots?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Multiple guideline sources say MTHFR polymorphism testing should not be part of routine thrombophilia evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Genetic Testing Claims | Homocysteine, Folate, Pregnancy, Clots, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1812,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does an MTHFR result mean I need methylfolate?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Folate, B12, homocysteine, and the actual medical context matter more than the genotype alone.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Genetic Testing Claims | Homocysteine, Folate, Pregnancy, Clots, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1813,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is homocysteine more useful than MTHFR testing?",
      "answer": "When the question is whether homocysteine is elevated and why it is elevated, including B12 or folate deficiency or rare metabolic disease.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Genetic Testing Claims | Homocysteine, Folate, Pregnancy, Clots, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1814,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative MTHFR test rule out clot risk?",
      "answer": "No. It only means common MTHFR variants were not found; it does not rule out other clotting risks or causes.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Genetic Testing Claims | Homocysteine, Folate, Pregnancy, Clots, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1815,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is MTHFR testing useful in pregnancy loss?",
      "answer": "Routine use is generally not supported. Pregnancy decisions should be based on the actual clinical problem and guideline-backed testing.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Genetic Testing Claims | Homocysteine, Folate, Pregnancy, Clots, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1816,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret a consumer MTHFR result?",
      "answer": "A clinician or genetic counselor is the safest next stop if the report is being used to guide treatment, pregnancy planning, or clot-risk decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Genetic Testing Claims | Homocysteine, Folate, Pregnancy, Clots, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-genetic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1817,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an MTHFR test look for?",
      "answer": "An MTHFR test looks for common variants such as C677T and A1298C in the MTHFR gene. It is a gene test, not a diagnosis of disease.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Testing Claims | Folate, Folic Acid, Homocysteine, Pregnancy, and Genetic Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1818,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Should I avoid folic acid if I have an MTHFR variant?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says people with an MTHFR variant can process all types of folate, including folic acid, and common variants are not a reason to avoid it.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Testing Claims | Folate, Folic Acid, Homocysteine, Pregnancy, and Genetic Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1819,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does an MTHFR variant explain blood clots or pregnancy loss by itself?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Common MTHFR variants are often overread in wellness reports, and claims about clots or pregnancy loss need stronger clinical evidence than genotype alone.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Testing Claims | Folate, Folic Acid, Homocysteine, Pregnancy, and Genetic Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1820,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is MTHFR testing needed if homocysteine is high?",
      "answer": "Often not. MedlinePlus says an MTHFR gene test is generally not needed just because homocysteine is high, since other causes are common and more actionable.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Testing Claims | Folate, Folic Acid, Homocysteine, Pregnancy, and Genetic Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1821,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When does MTHFR testing matter more?",
      "answer": "It matters more when a clinician is evaluating rare homocystinuria or another specific inherited disorder, not when a consumer report is making broad wellness claims.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Testing Claims | Folate, Folic Acid, Homocysteine, Pregnancy, and Genetic Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1822,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should be checked instead of focusing on MTHFR alone?",
      "answer": "Homocysteine, B12, folate, methylmalonic acid, kidney function, thyroid status, family history, and the exact reason for testing usually matter more than the common MTHFR variants.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Testing Claims | Folate, Folic Acid, Homocysteine, Pregnancy, and Genetic Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1823,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Should I change supplements because of an MTHFR result?",
      "answer": "Usually no without a clinician's input. The supplement question is better guided by folate, B12, homocysteine, diet, and the medical reason for testing than by the genotype alone.",
      "pageTitle": "MTHFR Testing Claims | Folate, Folic Acid, Homocysteine, Pregnancy, and Genetic Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mthfr-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1824,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive result mean I have cancer?",
      "answer": "No. It means the test found a signal that needs follow-up, and imaging or biopsy may still find no cancer.",
      "pageTitle": "Multi-Cancer Early Detection Blood Test Claims | MCED, Screening, False Positives, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1825,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can MCED replace guideline screening?",
      "answer": "No. Standard screenings remain the backbone of cancer prevention and early detection.",
      "pageTitle": "Multi-Cancer Early Detection Blood Test Claims | MCED, Screening, False Positives, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1826,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why can a positive test still end up with no cancer found?",
      "answer": "The signal may not be specific enough, or the cancer may be too small or difficult to find. NCI notes many positive results do not lead to a cancer diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Multi-Cancer Early Detection Blood Test Claims | MCED, Screening, False Positives, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1827,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is FDA approval the same for every product?",
      "answer": "No. Each test has its own intended use and regulatory status, so consumers need to check the exact product.",
      "pageTitle": "Multi-Cancer Early Detection Blood Test Claims | MCED, Screening, False Positives, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1828,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I still get standard screening?",
      "answer": "Yes. Guideline-backed cancer screening still matters even if you are considering an MCED test.",
      "pageTitle": "Multi-Cancer Early Detection Blood Test Claims | MCED, Screening, False Positives, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1829,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician can decide whether imaging, repeat testing, or standard screening is the best next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Multi-Cancer Early Detection Blood Test Claims | MCED, Screening, False Positives, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/multi-cancer-early-detection-blood-test-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1830,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is Mycoplasma genitalium included in a full STI panel?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Mycoplasma genitalium testing is not recommended as routine screening for asymptomatic people. CDC recommends targeted testing in specific persistent or recurrent symptom situations.",
      "pageTitle": "Mycoplasma Genitalium Testing | Mgen NAAT, Symptoms, Resistance, Partners, and Panel Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1831,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What test is used for Mycoplasma genitalium?",
      "answer": "CDC says culture is impractical for routine care. M. genitalium is usually detected with an FDA-cleared nucleic acid amplification test, or NAAT, using approved urine or swab sample types.",
      "pageTitle": "Mycoplasma Genitalium Testing | Mgen NAAT, Symptoms, Resistance, Partners, and Panel Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1832,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When should Mgen testing be considered?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends M. genitalium testing for men with recurrent nongonococcal urethritis and for women with recurrent cervicitis. Testing should also be considered in some PID situations.",
      "pageTitle": "Mycoplasma Genitalium Testing | Mgen NAAT, Symptoms, Resistance, Partners, and Panel Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1833,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does antibiotic resistance matter for Mgen?",
      "answer": "CDC says macrolide resistance is common and that resistance-guided therapy is preferred when available. A positive result should be managed by a clinician rather than self-treated from a lab report.",
      "pageTitle": "Mycoplasma Genitalium Testing | Mgen NAAT, Symptoms, Resistance, Partners, and Panel Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1834,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do partners need testing or treatment for Mgen?",
      "answer": "CDC notes that sex partners of people with symptomatic M. genitalium infection can be tested, and partners who test positive can be treated. If partner testing is not possible, partner treatment may be considered using the same regimen used for the patient.",
      "pageTitle": "Mycoplasma Genitalium Testing | Mgen NAAT, Symptoms, Resistance, Partners, and Panel Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1835,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is a test of cure always needed after Mgen treatment?",
      "answer": "Not always. CDC says test of cure is not recommended for asymptomatic people who received a recommended regimen, but follow-up changes when symptoms persist, alternative regimens are used, resistance testing is unavailable, or a clinician is concerned about treatment failure or reinfection.",
      "pageTitle": "Mycoplasma Genitalium Testing | Mgen NAAT, Symptoms, Resistance, Partners, and Panel Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/mycoplasma-genitalium-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1836,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are myelocytes on a CBC differential?",
      "answer": "Myelocytes are immature granulocyte-line white blood cell precursors. They normally mature in bone marrow before becoming metamyelocytes, bands, and mature neutrophils. If myelocytes appear in blood, the result is interpreted with the full CBC, smear review, symptoms, and trend.",
      "pageTitle": "Myelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Infection, Immature Granulocytes, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1837,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can infection cause myelocytes in blood?",
      "answer": "Yes. Infection, inflammation, tissue injury, physiologic stress, marrow recovery, medications such as corticosteroids, and growth-factor treatment can be associated with a left shift and immature granulocytes, including myelocytes.",
      "pageTitle": "Myelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Infection, Immature Granulocytes, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1838,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are myelocytes the same as immature granulocytes?",
      "answer": "Myelocytes are one type of immature granulocyte. Automated reports may group promyelocytes, myelocytes, and metamyelocytes under immature granulocytes, while a manual differential may list the stages separately.",
      "pageTitle": "Myelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Infection, Immature Granulocytes, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1839,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Are myelocytes the same as blasts?",
      "answer": "No. Blasts are less mature precursor cells. Myelocytes are later in the granulocyte maturation sequence. Blasts, Auer rods, promyelocytes, low platelets, anemia, or persistent high WBC can make the overall pattern more concerning.",
      "pageTitle": "Myelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Infection, Immature Granulocytes, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1840,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed for myelocytes?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual smear review, review of medications and recent illness, infection or inflammation evaluation, chemistry tests, and hematology review if the result is persistent, unexplained, or paired with blasts, anemia, low platelets, or very high WBC.",
      "pageTitle": "Myelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Infection, Immature Granulocytes, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1841,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should myelocytes be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Seek prompt medical guidance if myelocytes are reported with blasts, Auer rods, promyelocytes, possible acute leukemia, severe infection symptoms, fever with low neutrophils, shortness of breath, confusion, chest pain, fainting, unusual bleeding, low platelets, severe anemia, or a rapidly rising white blood cell count.",
      "pageTitle": "Myelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Infection, Immature Granulocytes, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/myelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1842,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a blood NAD test tell me if I am aging faster?",
      "answer": "No. It may measure a metabolite, but it is not a validated biological-age clock.",
      "pageTitle": "NAD Testing Claims | Blood NAD+, NR, NMN, Longevity Marketing, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1843,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do NR and NMN raise blood NAD?",
      "answer": "Often they can raise some blood NAD-related measures, but that does not prove a health benefit.",
      "pageTitle": "NAD Testing Claims | Blood NAD+, NR, NMN, Longevity Marketing, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1844,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is a low NAD result a deficiency diagnosis?",
      "answer": "Usually not. There is no routine consumer deficiency diagnosis built around NAD in the way people often imagine.",
      "pageTitle": "NAD Testing Claims | Blood NAD+, NR, NMN, Longevity Marketing, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1845,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should I test before starting a supplement?",
      "answer": "Only if the result will change a real medical or nutrition decision.",
      "pageTitle": "NAD Testing Claims | Blood NAD+, NR, NMN, Longevity Marketing, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1846,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can the sample type change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Whole blood, plasma, and metabolite panels can tell different stories.",
      "pageTitle": "NAD Testing Claims | Blood NAD+, NR, NMN, Longevity Marketing, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1847,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the safest interpretation?",
      "answer": "Use the report as a research-style clue, not a prescription for self-optimization.",
      "pageTitle": "NAD Testing Claims | Blood NAD+, NR, NMN, Longevity Marketing, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1848,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Does a low NAD result mean I need niacin or NR?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Supplement choices should follow a clinician's interpretation of the full clinical picture, not the NAD number alone.",
      "pageTitle": "NAD Testing Claims | Blood NAD+, NR, NMN, Longevity Marketing, and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nad-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nad-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1849,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a negative RET test rule out MEN2?",
      "answer": "It lowers the likelihood of hereditary MEN2, but the exact meaning depends on the test scope, the sample type, and the clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Negative RET Testing With Medullary Thyroid Cancer | Germline Testing, Tumor Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1850,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can medullary thyroid cancer still be sporadic if RET is negative?",
      "answer": "Yes. MTC can be sporadic, and a negative germline RET result makes inherited RET-related MEN2 less likely.",
      "pageTitle": "Negative RET Testing With Medullary Thyroid Cancer | Germline Testing, Tumor Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1851,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do I still need tumor testing if germline RET is negative?",
      "answer": "Sometimes yes. Tumor testing can answer a different question, especially about treatment biomarkers or unexpected tumor biology.",
      "pageTitle": "Negative RET Testing With Medullary Thyroid Cancer | Germline Testing, Tumor Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1852,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should my relatives be tested if my RET test is negative?",
      "answer": "Usually not for a known familial RET variant, but family history and specialist review still matter if the clinical picture suggests inherited risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Negative RET Testing With Medullary Thyroid Cancer | Germline Testing, Tumor Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1853,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the report did not cover all RET regions?",
      "answer": "Then the result may be less reassuring, and the exact assay design should be reviewed with the ordering clinician or genetics team.",
      "pageTitle": "Negative RET Testing With Medullary Thyroid Cancer | Germline Testing, Tumor Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1854,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I see a genetics specialist?",
      "answer": "When the result affects surgery timing, adrenal screening, family testing, or when there is any ambiguity about tumor versus germline testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Negative RET Testing With Medullary Thyroid Cancer | Germline Testing, Tumor Testing, MEN2, Family Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/negative-ret-testing-medullary-thyroid-cancer.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1855,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high neutrophil count mean?",
      "answer": "A high neutrophil count is called neutrophilia. It means the absolute number of neutrophils is above the lab's expected range. Neutrophils often rise with infection, inflammation, tissue injury, surgery, stress, corticosteroid medicines, smoking, pregnancy, and sometimes blood or bone marrow disorders.",
      "pageTitle": "High Neutrophil Count | Neutrophilia, ANC, Infection, Steroids, Stress, Left Shift, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1856,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is high neutrophils the same as high white blood cells?",
      "answer": "Not exactly. A high white blood cell count can be driven by neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils, or immature cells. Neutrophilia is one specific pattern within the CBC differential.",
      "pageTitle": "High Neutrophil Count | Neutrophilia, ANC, Infection, Steroids, Stress, Left Shift, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1857,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the absolute neutrophil count matter?",
      "answer": "The absolute neutrophil count, or ANC, is more useful than the neutrophil percentage alone. A high percentage can look dramatic even when the total WBC is not very high, while the absolute count shows how many neutrophils are actually present.",
      "pageTitle": "High Neutrophil Count | Neutrophilia, ANC, Infection, Steroids, Stress, Left Shift, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1858,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can steroids or stress cause high neutrophils?",
      "answer": "Yes. Corticosteroid medicines, physical stress, emotional stress, recent surgery, trauma, burns, vigorous exercise, smoking, and pregnancy can raise neutrophils. The timing, symptoms, and repeat trend help decide whether the pattern fits a reactive explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "High Neutrophil Count | Neutrophilia, ANC, Infection, Steroids, Stress, Left Shift, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1859,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What do left shift, bands, or immature granulocytes mean?",
      "answer": "Left shift, bands, myelocytes, metamyelocytes, or immature granulocytes can appear when the marrow is responding to infection, inflammation, or stress. The amount, smear appearance, symptoms, and whether blasts or other abnormal cells are present change the follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "High Neutrophil Count | Neutrophilia, ANC, Infection, Steroids, Stress, Left Shift, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1860,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should high neutrophils be followed up quickly?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up is important when the count is very high, rising, persistent, paired with immature cells or blasts, or accompanied by severe illness, trouble breathing, confusion, persistent fever, unexplained weight loss, night sweats, easy bruising, anemia, low platelets, or abnormal smear comments.",
      "pageTitle": "High Neutrophil Count | Neutrophilia, ANC, Infection, Steroids, Stress, Left Shift, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1861,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a low neutrophil count mean?",
      "answer": "A low neutrophil count is called neutropenia. Neutrophils are white blood cells that help protect against infection, especially bacterial and fungal infection. The absolute neutrophil count, or ANC, is the key number to interpret, along with symptoms, trend, medicines, and the rest of the CBC.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Neutrophil Count | Neutropenia, ANC, Fever, Infection Risk, Medicines, Viral Illness, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1862,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is neutropenia the same as a low white blood cell count?",
      "answer": "Neutropenia can make the total white blood cell count low, but the terms are not identical. A low WBC can be caused by low neutrophils, low lymphocytes, or other patterns. ANC is the more specific number for neutrophil-related infection-risk questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Neutrophil Count | Neutropenia, ANC, Fever, Infection Risk, Medicines, Viral Illness, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1863,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does fever matter with low neutrophils?",
      "answer": "Fever can be an important warning sign when neutrophils are significantly low, especially during chemotherapy or other immune-suppressing treatment. CDC, NCI, and Merck Manual resources all emphasize prompt medical guidance for fever or infection symptoms in neutropenia.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Neutrophil Count | Neutropenia, ANC, Fever, Infection Risk, Medicines, Viral Illness, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1864,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can medicines or viral illness cause neutropenia?",
      "answer": "Yes. Neutropenia can happen after viral illness, chemotherapy, radiation, immune-suppressing medicines, some antibiotics or other drugs, autoimmune disease, HIV or other infections, B12 or folate deficiency, copper deficiency, severe undernutrition, alcohol-related marrow effects, and bone marrow disorders.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Neutrophil Count | Neutropenia, ANC, Fever, Infection Risk, Medicines, Viral Illness, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1865,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should a low neutrophil count be followed up quickly?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up is important with fever, chills, mouth sores, severe sore throat, shortness of breath, confusion, severe weakness, painful urination, rapidly worsening infection, recurrent infections, very low or falling ANC, abnormal smear findings, or low hemoglobin or platelets.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Neutrophil Count | Neutropenia, ANC, Fever, Infection Risk, Medicines, Viral Illness, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1866,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after a low neutrophil count?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, ANC trend review, peripheral smear, medication review, infection testing based on symptoms, B12, folate, copper, HIV or hepatitis testing when appropriate, autoimmune testing, and hematology review when neutropenia is persistent, severe, unexplained, or paired with other abnormal blood-cell lines.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Neutrophil Count | Neutropenia, ANC, Fever, Infection Risk, Medicines, Viral Illness, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/neutrophil-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1867,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is newborn screening genetic testing?",
      "answer": "Not usually. Newborn screening is a public-health screen, while genetic testing usually looks for specific genes or variants for a medical question.",
      "pageTitle": "Newborn Screening vs Genetic Testing | Heel Stick, Hearing, Heart Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1868,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive screen mean a baby has a disease?",
      "answer": "No. A screen is not a diagnosis, so abnormal results need prompt confirmatory testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Newborn Screening vs Genetic Testing | Heel Stick, Hearing, Heart Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1869,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why are heel-stick blood spots used?",
      "answer": "They let state programs screen for many serious conditions soon after birth with a small blood sample.",
      "pageTitle": "Newborn Screening vs Genetic Testing | Heel Stick, Hearing, Heart Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1870,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if hearing or heart screening is abnormal?",
      "answer": "The baby usually needs follow-up audiology or cardiac evaluation rather than genetic sequencing right away.",
      "pageTitle": "Newborn Screening vs Genetic Testing | Heel Stick, Hearing, Heart Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1871,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can newborn screening replace genetic testing?",
      "answer": "No. Newborn screening is designed to catch selected treatable conditions early and does not replace diagnostic DNA testing when that is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Newborn Screening vs Genetic Testing | Heel Stick, Hearing, Heart Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1872,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should explain the result?",
      "answer": "The birth team, pediatrician, and state newborn screening program can help explain the screen and next steps.",
      "pageTitle": "Newborn Screening vs Genetic Testing | Heel Stick, Hearing, Heart Screening, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/newborn-screening-vs-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1873,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an NF1 test confirm?",
      "answer": "It can confirm an inherited or mosaic NF1 variant, but the clinical picture still matters because many people with NF1 are diagnosed from exam findings and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Genetic Testing for Tumor Predisposition | Neurofibromatosis Type 1, Cafe-au-Lait Spots, Plexiform Neurofibromas, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1874,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can blood testing be negative?",
      "answer": "The variant may be mosaic or tissue-limited, so blood can miss it even when the skin, tumors, or other features still point toward NF1.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Genetic Testing for Tumor Predisposition | Neurofibromatosis Type 1, Cafe-au-Lait Spots, Plexiform Neurofibromas, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1875,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does an NF1 tumor result mean inherited disease?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. A tumor-only NF1 finding can be somatic, so the lab report and sample type need to be checked before family-risk conclusions are made.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Genetic Testing for Tumor Predisposition | Neurofibromatosis Type 1, Cafe-au-Lait Spots, Plexiform Neurofibromas, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1876,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a positive result change surveillance?",
      "answer": "Yes. A confirmed NF1 result can affect eye exams, blood pressure checks, neurologic follow-up, and tumor surveillance planning.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Genetic Testing for Tumor Predisposition | Neurofibromatosis Type 1, Cafe-au-Lait Spots, Plexiform Neurofibromas, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1877,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should family members be tested?",
      "answer": "Family testing is most helpful when the familial variant is known or when the result is clearly germline. Mosaic or uncertain results need a genetics review first.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Genetic Testing for Tumor Predisposition | Neurofibromatosis Type 1, Cafe-au-Lait Spots, Plexiform Neurofibromas, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1878,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should review the result?",
      "answer": "A genetics professional is often helpful because mosaicism, tumor-only findings, and family implications can be easy to misread without context.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Genetic Testing for Tumor Predisposition | Neurofibromatosis Type 1, Cafe-au-Lait Spots, Plexiform Neurofibromas, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-genetic-testing-tumor-predisposition.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1879,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is NF1 linked to pheochromocytoma?",
      "answer": "NF1 is a tumor-suppressor syndrome that can include pheochromocytoma or paraganglioma, so the adrenal question is part of the broader NF1 picture.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | Blood Pressure Spells, Metanephrines, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1880,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does high blood pressure alone mean pheochromocytoma?",
      "answer": "No. High blood pressure can have many causes, but spells, headaches, sweating, palpitations, and an adrenal mass raise the need for metanephrine testing.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | Blood Pressure Spells, Metanephrines, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1881,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "If an NF1 change is found on tumor testing, is it inherited?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Tumor-only NF1 findings can be somatic, so germline testing and sample type matter before family-risk conclusions are made.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | Blood Pressure Spells, Metanephrines, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1882,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should metanephrines be checked before surgery?",
      "answer": "If pheochromocytoma is possible, biochemical testing is usually reviewed before procedures that could trigger a crisis.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | Blood Pressure Spells, Metanephrines, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1883,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a negative blood NF1 test rule it out?",
      "answer": "No. Negative blood testing does not fully exclude mosaic NF1 or a different explanation when the clinical features are convincing.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | Blood Pressure Spells, Metanephrines, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1884,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should review the result?",
      "answer": "A genetics professional or endocrine specialist is often helpful, especially when the result affects tumor surgery, family testing, or interpretation of a tumor-only variant.",
      "pageTitle": "NF1 Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | Blood Pressure Spells, Metanephrines, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nf1-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1885,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the most useful norovirus test?",
      "answer": "For outbreak or public-health work, RT-qPCR on stool is the most important modern test. CDC also notes that whole stool is the preferred specimen for laboratory diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Norovirus Stool Test | RT-qPCR, Whole Stool, Outbreak Testing, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1886,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is norovirus testing usually not needed?",
      "answer": "Many individual cases are diagnosed clinically from symptoms and exposure history. Testing is more useful when the result changes outbreak control, infection-control decisions, or the search for another cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Norovirus Stool Test | RT-qPCR, Whole Stool, Outbreak Testing, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1887,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does specimen type matter so much?",
      "answer": "CDC says whole stool is the preferred clinical specimen, and timing plus storage affect whether viral RNA or antigen can still be detected.",
      "pageTitle": "Norovirus Stool Test | RT-qPCR, Whole Stool, Outbreak Testing, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1888,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do antigen tests replace PCR?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says enzyme immunoassays can be used in some outbreak settings, but negative results should be confirmed by RT-qPCR and EIA kits should not replace RT-qPCR during outbreak investigations.",
      "pageTitle": "Norovirus Stool Test | RT-qPCR, Whole Stool, Outbreak Testing, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1889,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the GI panel is positive for norovirus?",
      "answer": "A positive panel result still has to be read in context: symptoms, dehydration risk, age, immune status, and whether the result is part of a cluster or a single case all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Norovirus Stool Test | RT-qPCR, Whole Stool, Outbreak Testing, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1890,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should healthcare or food-service outbreaks be reported?",
      "answer": "CDC says healthcare providers should report outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis, including suspected norovirus outbreaks, to the appropriate health department.",
      "pageTitle": "Norovirus Stool Test | RT-qPCR, Whole Stool, Outbreak Testing, and Clinical Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/norovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1891,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are NRBCs on a CBC?",
      "answer": "NRBCs are nucleated red blood cells, also called erythroblasts. They are immature red blood cell forms that are usually not seen in adult peripheral blood. If they appear on a CBC or smear, clinicians look at the clinical context, the smear, and other CBC results.",
      "pageTitle": "NRBCs on CBC | Nucleated Red Blood Cells, Peripheral Smear, Anemia, Hypoxia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1892,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are NRBCs normal in newborns?",
      "answer": "A small NRBC finding can be physiologic around birth, especially in newborns. The meaning is different in older children and adults, where NRBCs more often suggest marrow stress or another underlying problem.",
      "pageTitle": "NRBCs on CBC | Nucleated Red Blood Cells, Peripheral Smear, Anemia, Hypoxia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1893,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does NRBCs mean in adults?",
      "answer": "In older children and adults, NRBCs can reflect severe anemia, blood loss, hemolysis, hypoxia, critical illness, serious infection, marrow infiltration, or a leukoerythroblastic pattern. They should not be ignored if they are persistent or paired with other abnormal CBC findings.",
      "pageTitle": "NRBCs on CBC | Nucleated Red Blood Cells, Peripheral Smear, Anemia, Hypoxia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1894,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does NRBC mean leukemia?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. NRBCs can appear in many stress or marrow-recovery settings. If the smear also shows immature white cells, teardrop cells, blasts, or other abnormalities, clinicians may think about marrow infiltration or a hematologic disorder and may request more testing.",
      "pageTitle": "NRBCs on CBC | Nucleated Red Blood Cells, Peripheral Smear, Anemia, Hypoxia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1895,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include a repeat CBC with differential, manual peripheral smear review, reticulocyte count, anemia or hemolysis workup, oxygen and bleeding assessment when relevant, and hematology review if the pattern is unexplained or accompanied by other abnormal blood counts.",
      "pageTitle": "NRBCs on CBC | Nucleated Red Blood Cells, Peripheral Smear, Anemia, Hypoxia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1896,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should NRBCs be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Prompt medical guidance is important when NRBCs are reported with shortness of breath, chest pain, severe weakness, bleeding, jaundice, very low hemoglobin, low oxygen, fever, severe infection symptoms, confusion, or other signs of critical illness.",
      "pageTitle": "NRBCs on CBC | Nucleated Red Blood Cells, Peripheral Smear, Anemia, Hypoxia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/nrbc-present-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1897,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does the omega-3 index measure?",
      "answer": "The omega-3 index is commonly described in research as the EPA plus DHA content of red blood cell membranes, expressed as a percent of total identified fatty acids.",
      "pageTitle": "Omega-3 Index Test | EPA, DHA, Fish Oil, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/omega-3-index-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/omega-3-index-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/omega-3-index-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1898,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is the omega-3 index a routine medical test?",
      "answer": "No. The omega-3 index is not a routine screening test for most people. It may help estimate omega-3 status, but decisions about diet, supplements, and prescription omega-3 products should be made in clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Omega-3 Index Test | EPA, DHA, Fish Oil, and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/omega-3-index-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/omega-3-index-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/omega-3-index-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1899,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does PAI-1 do?",
      "answer": "PAI-1 is the main inhibitor of tissue plasminogen activator and urokinase plasminogen activator. In plain language, it helps slow the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin, which slows clot breakdown after a clot has formed.",
      "pageTitle": "PAI-1 Activity Testing | SERPINE1, Activity vs Antigen, Bleeding, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1900,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does low PAI-1 activity mean?",
      "answer": "Low or absent activity can fit complete PAI-1 deficiency or another hyperfibrinolysis pattern, especially when delayed bleeding follows surgery, dental work, childbirth, trauma, or menstruation. GeneReviews also notes that PAI-1 activity assays can have limited ability to separate very low from zero, so antigen, history, and sometimes genetics are needed.",
      "pageTitle": "PAI-1 Activity Testing | SERPINE1, Activity vs Antigen, Bleeding, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1901,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why order antigen with activity?",
      "answer": "Activity tells you whether the protein is working. Antigen tells you how much protein is present. Low activity with low antigen supports a quantitative deficiency pattern, while low activity with normal antigen can suggest a qualitative problem or a specimen issue.",
      "pageTitle": "PAI-1 Activity Testing | SERPINE1, Activity vs Antigen, Bleeding, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1902,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is PAI-1 activity testing the same as SERPINE1 4G/5G genotyping?",
      "answer": "No. Activity testing measures how well PAI-1 works in plasma. SERPINE1 4G/5G genotyping looks at a DNA variant that may be associated with higher PAI-1 activity, but it does not answer the same question as the activity assay.",
      "pageTitle": "PAI-1 Activity Testing | SERPINE1, Activity vs Antigen, Bleeding, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1903,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can pregnancy or inflammation change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Lab references note that PAI-1 varies by time of day, can increase during pregnancy, and can rise as an acute-phase reactant with inflammation, infection, or trauma.",
      "pageTitle": "PAI-1 Activity Testing | SERPINE1, Activity vs Antigen, Bleeding, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1904,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does normal PT and aPTT rule out PAI-1 deficiency?",
      "answer": "No. PT and aPTT can be normal because the problem is fibrinolysis, not clot formation. That is why PAI-1 testing is usually considered only when the bleeding story suggests a clot-breakdown problem.",
      "pageTitle": "PAI-1 Activity Testing | SERPINE1, Activity vs Antigen, Bleeding, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pai-1-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1905,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is PALB2 mainly a breast-cancer gene?",
      "answer": "PALB2 is most often discussed for breast cancer risk, but pancreatic and ovarian risk questions may also matter in some families.",
      "pageTitle": "PALB2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Ovarian Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1906,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a PALB2 VUS change care?",
      "answer": "No. A variant of uncertain significance should not be managed like a confirmed pathogenic variant.",
      "pageTitle": "PALB2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Ovarian Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1907,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative PALB2 result rule out inherited risk?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative result can still be uninformative if the family history remains strong or the test was not targeted to a known familial variant.",
      "pageTitle": "PALB2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Ovarian Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1908,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does tumor-only PALB2 prove inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only finding does not by itself prove that the variant is inherited.",
      "pageTitle": "PALB2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Ovarian Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1909,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "If a familial pathogenic PALB2 variant is known, targeted family testing may be appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "PALB2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Ovarian Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1910,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should counseling clarify first?",
      "answer": "The exact variant, family cancer pattern, specimen type, and whether prior tumor findings were confirmed in germline DNA.",
      "pageTitle": "PALB2 Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Breast, Pancreatic, Ovarian Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/palb2-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1911,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does low pancreatic elastase mean?",
      "answer": "Low fecal elastase can suggest exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, but the result needs to be read with symptoms, stool quality, and the broader clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Pancreatic Elastase Stool Test | Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency, Chronic Pancreatitis, CF, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1912,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can watery stool affect the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Watery stool can dilute the sample and make a result look lower than it really is.",
      "pageTitle": "Pancreatic Elastase Stool Test | Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency, Chronic Pancreatitis, CF, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1913,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a normal result rule out pancreatic disease?",
      "answer": "No. A normal test lowers the chance of significant exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, but it does not explain every digestive symptom.",
      "pageTitle": "Pancreatic Elastase Stool Test | Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency, Chronic Pancreatitis, CF, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1914,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Who is most likely to need this test?",
      "answer": "People with greasy stools, weight loss, chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic surgery, cystic fibrosis, or other signs of malabsorption are common candidates.",
      "pageTitle": "Pancreatic Elastase Stool Test | Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency, Chronic Pancreatitis, CF, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1915,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I stop enzymes before the test?",
      "answer": "Follow the ordering clinician's instructions. Some guidance says enzyme supplements may need to be stopped before collection, but do not change treatment without instructions.",
      "pageTitle": "Pancreatic Elastase Stool Test | Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency, Chronic Pancreatitis, CF, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1916,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What comes after a low result?",
      "answer": "The next step may include nutritional labs, imaging, diabetes review, celiac testing, pancreatic enzyme treatment, or another GI workup depending on the context.",
      "pageTitle": "Pancreatic Elastase Stool Test | Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency, Chronic Pancreatitis, CF, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pancreatic-elastase-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1917,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are Pappenheimer bodies on a blood smear?",
      "answer": "Pappenheimer bodies are small iron-containing granules inside red blood cells. They are morphology clues, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Pappenheimer Bodies on Blood Smear Interpretation | Iron Granules, Sideroblastic Anemia, Thalassemia, Asplenia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1918,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "How are Pappenheimer bodies confirmed?",
      "answer": "A lab may use an iron stain such as Prussian blue to show that the inclusions contain iron.",
      "pageTitle": "Pappenheimer Bodies on Blood Smear Interpretation | Iron Granules, Sideroblastic Anemia, Thalassemia, Asplenia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1919,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What do Pappenheimer bodies suggest?",
      "answer": "They can fit with sideroblastic erythropoiesis, lead exposure, thalassemia, myelodysplastic syndromes, and absent or impaired splenic filtering.",
      "pageTitle": "Pappenheimer Bodies on Blood Smear Interpretation | Iron Granules, Sideroblastic Anemia, Thalassemia, Asplenia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1920,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "How are Pappenheimer bodies different from basophilic stippling?",
      "answer": "They can look similar on a routine Wright-stained smear, but iron staining helps separate iron granules from other basophilic inclusions.",
      "pageTitle": "Pappenheimer Bodies on Blood Smear Interpretation | Iron Granules, Sideroblastic Anemia, Thalassemia, Asplenia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1921,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests usually follow Pappenheimer bodies?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up tests include CBC indices, reticulocytes, ferritin, iron saturation, lead testing, hemoglobin studies when appropriate, and hematology review if the finding persists.",
      "pageTitle": "Pappenheimer Bodies on Blood Smear Interpretation | Iron Granules, Sideroblastic Anemia, Thalassemia, Asplenia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1922,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When are Pappenheimer bodies more concerning?",
      "answer": "They are more concerning when they are persistent, appear with anemia or other cytopenias, or fit a broader marrow or splenic disorder pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Pappenheimer Bodies on Blood Smear Interpretation | Iron Granules, Sideroblastic Anemia, Thalassemia, Asplenia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pappenheimer-bodies-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1923,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the difference between tumor testing and germline testing?",
      "answer": "Tumor testing looks for variants in the tumor itself, while germline testing looks for inherited variants in blood, saliva, or another normal tissue. A tumor result may help explain biology or treatment, but it does not by itself prove inherited family risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Paraganglioma tumor testing vs germline testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1924,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is tumor testing useful?",
      "answer": "Tumor testing is useful when the question is which variants are present in the lesion and whether they might explain the tumor’s behavior. It can also help with paired tumor-normal interpretation and may point toward a hereditary syndrome that should be confirmed in normal tissue.",
      "pageTitle": "Paraganglioma tumor testing vs germline testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1925,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is germline testing useful?",
      "answer": "Germline testing is useful when the goal is to find inherited risk for the patient and relatives. NCI notes that genetic counseling is part of care for people with pheochromocytoma or paraganglioma, and GeneReviews recommends molecular genetic testing for these tumors.",
      "pageTitle": "Paraganglioma tumor testing vs germline testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1926,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a tumor-only result count as inherited?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only result does not prove inheritance. It may be somatic, meaning acquired in the tumor, and paired tumor-normal or blood testing is usually needed before family risk is assigned.",
      "pageTitle": "Paraganglioma tumor testing vs germline testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1927,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is paired tumor-normal testing best?",
      "answer": "Paired tumor-normal testing is best when you want to separate tumor-only changes from germline changes in one workflow. It is especially helpful if the first tumor report raised the possibility of an inherited PPGL syndrome but the germline status is still unclear.",
      "pageTitle": "Paraganglioma tumor testing vs germline testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1928,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should relatives do if a germline variant is found?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic germline variant is confirmed, relatives may be offered targeted testing for the known family variant. That is usually more precise than broad panel testing for every relative and can shape surveillance sooner.",
      "pageTitle": "Paraganglioma tumor testing vs germline testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paraganglioma-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1929,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why can sputum be better than stool?",
      "answer": "Paragonimus eggs are usually produced in the lungs, so sputum often gives the most direct evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Paragonimus Antibody Testing | Lung Fluke, Sputum, Stool, Eosinophils, Travel, and CDC Serology",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1930,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can stool still help?",
      "answer": "Yes. Swallowed eggs may appear in stool, so multiple stool exams can add evidence.",
      "pageTitle": "Paragonimus Antibody Testing | Lung Fluke, Sputum, Stool, Eosinophils, Travel, and CDC Serology",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1931,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can antibody testing confirm active disease?",
      "answer": "It can support the diagnosis, but it usually needs symptoms, exposure history, and microscopy context.",
      "pageTitle": "Paragonimus Antibody Testing | Lung Fluke, Sputum, Stool, Eosinophils, Travel, and CDC Serology",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1932,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does eosinophilia matter?",
      "answer": "Eosinophilia is common in paragonimiasis and can strengthen suspicion when the exposure history fits.",
      "pageTitle": "Paragonimus Antibody Testing | Lung Fluke, Sputum, Stool, Eosinophils, Travel, and CDC Serology",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1933,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should someone think beyond lungs?",
      "answer": "Neurologic symptoms or meningitis-like symptoms need urgent medical evaluation because paragonimiasis can involve the CNS.",
      "pageTitle": "Paragonimus Antibody Testing | Lung Fluke, Sputum, Stool, Eosinophils, Travel, and CDC Serology",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1934,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "An infectious disease clinician can help decide whether sputum, stool, serology, or imaging is the best next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Paragonimus Antibody Testing | Lung Fluke, Sputum, Stool, Eosinophils, Travel, and CDC Serology",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/paragonimus-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1935,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is PTH hard to interpret by itself?",
      "answer": "Because PTH is a relationship test. The same number can mean different things depending on calcium, phosphorus, vitamin D, kidney function, magnesium, and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Parathyroid hormone (PTH) test | Calcium, vitamin D, kidney disease, and pattern interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1936,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does high calcium with high or normal PTH suggest?",
      "answer": "That pattern can fit primary hyperparathyroidism, especially if the PTH is not suppressed when calcium is high.",
      "pageTitle": "Parathyroid hormone (PTH) test | Calcium, vitamin D, kidney disease, and pattern interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1937,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does low calcium with high PTH suggest?",
      "answer": "That pattern can point toward vitamin D deficiency, chronic kidney disease, low calcium intake, or another cause of secondary hyperparathyroidism.",
      "pageTitle": "Parathyroid hormone (PTH) test | Calcium, vitamin D, kidney disease, and pattern interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1938,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does low calcium with low PTH suggest?",
      "answer": "That pattern can suggest hypoparathyroidism or severe low magnesium, especially after neck surgery or with autoimmune disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Parathyroid hormone (PTH) test | Calcium, vitamin D, kidney disease, and pattern interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1939,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do kidney disease and PTH go together?",
      "answer": "Damaged kidneys can change vitamin D activation and phosphorus handling, which can push PTH higher over time and contribute to CKD-mineral and bone disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Parathyroid hormone (PTH) test | Calcium, vitamin D, kidney disease, and pattern interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1940,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What other tests are usually checked with PTH?",
      "answer": "Calcium, albumin or ionized calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, 25-hydroxy vitamin D, creatinine, and eGFR are common next pieces of the picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Parathyroid hormone (PTH) test | Calcium, vitamin D, kidney disease, and pattern interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1941,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "When should PTH be repeated or followed by specialist review?",
      "answer": "When the calcium pattern is unclear, kidney disease is present, or there are stones, bone loss, abnormal vitamin D, or symptoms that do not fit the initial result.",
      "pageTitle": "Parathyroid hormone (PTH) test | Calcium, vitamin D, kidney disease, and pattern interpretation",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/parathyroid-hormone-pth-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1942,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is expedited partner therapy for STIs?",
      "answer": "CDC describes expedited partner therapy, or EPT, as treating sex partners of people diagnosed with chlamydia or gonorrhea by giving prescriptions or medications to the patient for the partner without first examining the partner, when allowed by law.",
      "pageTitle": "Partner Notification and EPT for STIs | Testing, Treatment, and State Rules",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/partner-notification-ept-sti.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/partner-notification-ept-sti.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/partner-notification-ept-sti.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1943,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does EPT replace STI testing for partners?",
      "answer": "No. EPT can help partners receive timely treatment in selected situations, but partners may still need clinical evaluation, HIV testing, syphilis testing, pregnancy-related care, allergy review, and testing for other STIs.",
      "pageTitle": "Partner Notification and EPT for STIs | Testing, Treatment, and State Rules",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/partner-notification-ept-sti.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/partner-notification-ept-sti.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/partner-notification-ept-sti.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1944,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a pelvic exam the same as STI testing?",
      "answer": "No. A pelvic exam is a physical exam. STI testing requires specific lab tests, such as blood tests, urine tests, or swabs from the relevant body sites. You can have a pelvic exam without STI testing, and many STI tests can be done without a pelvic exam.",
      "pageTitle": "Pelvic Exam vs STI Testing | Pap, HPV, Swabs, Urine, and Blood Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pelvic-exam-vs-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pelvic-exam-vs-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pelvic-exam-vs-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1945,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a Pap test check for STIs?",
      "answer": "A Pap test is cervical cancer screening. It does not replace STI testing for infections such as HIV, syphilis, chlamydia, gonorrhea, hepatitis, herpes, trichomoniasis, BV, yeast, or Mycoplasma genitalium.",
      "pageTitle": "Pelvic Exam vs STI Testing | Pap, HPV, Swabs, Urine, and Blood Tests",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pelvic-exam-vs-sti-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pelvic-exam-vs-sti-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pelvic-exam-vs-sti-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1946,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a peripheral blood smear look for?",
      "answer": "A peripheral blood smear lets a trained reviewer look at red cells, white cells, and platelets directly under a microscope. It can show cell size, shape, maturity, clumping, inclusions, fragments, and other morphology clues that a CBC analyzer may not fully describe.",
      "pageTitle": "Peripheral Blood Smear Test | Cell Morphology, CBC Follow-Up, Hemolysis Clues, and Platelet Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1947,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is it ordered after a CBC?",
      "answer": "A smear is often a follow-up to an abnormal CBC or analyzer flag. It helps translate a number into a pattern and can add clues about anemia, infection, hemolysis, platelet problems, or marrow stress.",
      "pageTitle": "Peripheral Blood Smear Test | Cell Morphology, CBC Follow-Up, Hemolysis Clues, and Platelet Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1948,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does platelet clumping mean?",
      "answer": "Platelet clumping can make the automated platelet count look lower than it really is. A smear helps the lab and clinician decide whether the result is a true low platelet count or a collection problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Peripheral Blood Smear Test | Cell Morphology, CBC Follow-Up, Hemolysis Clues, and Platelet Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1949,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a smear point to hemolysis?",
      "answer": "Yes. Shapes such as schistocytes, spherocytes, bite cells, target cells, or polychromasia can support hemolysis or red-cell stress, especially when they match bilirubin, LDH, haptoglobin, and reticulocyte patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "Peripheral Blood Smear Test | Cell Morphology, CBC Follow-Up, Hemolysis Clues, and Platelet Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1950,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I ask for pathology review?",
      "answer": "Pathology or hematology review is often more useful when the smear shows blasts, dysplasia, unusual fragments, persistent platelet clumping, or a pattern that does not fit the CBC or symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Peripheral Blood Smear Test | Cell Morphology, CBC Follow-Up, Hemolysis Clues, and Platelet Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1951,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is a normal smear always reassuring?",
      "answer": "A normal smear is reassuring, but it does not rule out every blood disorder. Mild or early problems can still need CBC trend review, iron studies, hemolysis labs, or other tests depending on the symptom pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Peripheral Blood Smear Test | Cell Morphology, CBC Follow-Up, Hemolysis Clues, and Platelet Review",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/peripheral-blood-smear-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1952,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a high PFAS level diagnose disease?",
      "answer": "No. PFAS testing shows exposure, not a specific diagnosis or future outcome.",
      "pageTitle": "PFAS Blood Testing Claims | Forever Chemicals, Exposure, Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1953,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Should I repeat PFAS testing to check treatment?",
      "answer": "Usually not for treatment, because there is no direct PFAS treatment path that the number can track on its own.",
      "pageTitle": "PFAS Blood Testing Claims | Forever Chemicals, Exposure, Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1954,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What source is most actionable?",
      "answer": "Drinking water, occupational exposure, or another identifiable source is usually more actionable than the number alone.",
      "pageTitle": "PFAS Blood Testing Claims | Forever Chemicals, Exposure, Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1955,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do public-health comparisons matter?",
      "answer": "They help put the result in context, but the comparison still does not equal an individual diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "PFAS Blood Testing Claims | Forever Chemicals, Exposure, Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1956,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a community estimate replace blood testing?",
      "answer": "No. It can offer context, but it does not have the same certainty as an actual blood test.",
      "pageTitle": "PFAS Blood Testing Claims | Forever Chemicals, Exposure, Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1957,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do after getting a result?",
      "answer": "Use it to reduce exposure sources and keep routine preventive care current.",
      "pageTitle": "PFAS Blood Testing Claims | Forever Chemicals, Exposure, Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pfas-blood-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1958,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does pharmacogenomics testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for gene variants that can change how a person processes or responds to certain medicines.",
      "pageTitle": "Pharmacogenomics Testing Guide | Genes, Medication Response, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1959,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is pharmacogenomics the same as choosing the perfect drug?",
      "answer": "No. It can narrow choices for some medication questions, but age, kidney function, liver function, diagnosis, dose, other medicines, and side effects still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Pharmacogenomics Testing Guide | Genes, Medication Response, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1960,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can one PGx test guide every medication?",
      "answer": "No. The useful gene-drug relationship is medication-specific, and some drugs have stronger evidence than others.",
      "pageTitle": "Pharmacogenomics Testing Guide | Genes, Medication Response, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1961,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should I change a prescription based on a consumer report?",
      "answer": "Not without the prescribing clinician. Consumer reports may not cover the right variants or may overstate what the result can prove.",
      "pageTitle": "Pharmacogenomics Testing Guide | Genes, Medication Response, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1962,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Which sources are most useful for interpretation?",
      "answer": "FDA labeling, CPIC guidance, and reliable clinical references such as MedlinePlus are a better starting point than marketing claims.",
      "pageTitle": "Pharmacogenomics Testing Guide | Genes, Medication Response, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1963,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is a pharmacist or specialist helpful?",
      "answer": "A pharmacist, genetic counselor, or specialist can help when the result could affect a high-risk drug choice, an adverse reaction history, or a complex medication list.",
      "pageTitle": "Pharmacogenomics Testing Guide | Genes, Medication Response, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pharmacogenomics-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1964,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is phosphorus the same as phosphate on a blood test?",
      "answer": "A phosphorus blood test is often reported as phosphate. Phosphate contains the mineral phosphorus, and the result is interpreted with kidney function, calcium, PTH, vitamin D, magnesium, medicines, diet, and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Phosphorus Blood Test Guide | Phosphate, Kidney Disease, Calcium, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1965,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What can cause high phosphorus in blood?",
      "answer": "High phosphorus, also called hyperphosphatemia, is often linked to chronic kidney disease because kidneys help remove extra phosphorus. It may also relate to mineral and bone disorder, high intake in susceptible people, medicines, supplements, or severe illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Phosphorus Blood Test Guide | Phosphate, Kidney Disease, Calcium, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1966,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What can cause low phosphorus in blood?",
      "answer": "Low phosphorus can be seen with malnutrition, refeeding risk, alcohol use disorder, vitamin D problems, certain antacids or binders, insulin shifts, severe illness, or hormone-related patterns. Very low levels can affect muscles, nerves, blood cells, breathing, and heart function.",
      "pageTitle": "Phosphorus Blood Test Guide | Phosphate, Kidney Disease, Calcium, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1967,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Which tests are usually interpreted with phosphorus?",
      "answer": "Phosphorus is commonly interpreted with calcium, magnesium, creatinine, eGFR, PTH, 25(OH)D vitamin D, alkaline phosphatase, albumin, and sometimes urine phosphate or other kidney and bone-mineral tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Phosphorus Blood Test Guide | Phosphate, Kidney Disease, Calcium, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1968,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should you change phosphorus foods or take supplements based on one result?",
      "answer": "Do not start phosphorus supplements, phosphate binders, or a restrictive phosphorus diet based only on one result. Ask the ordering clinician whether the result fits kidney function, calcium, PTH, vitamin D, diet, medicines, symptoms, and whether repeat testing is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Phosphorus Blood Test Guide | Phosphate, Kidney Disease, Calcium, PTH, Vitamin D, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phosphorus-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1969,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a urine metabolite panel identify the source?",
      "answer": "Usually not by itself. Food, packaging, dust, plastics, personal-care products, and work exposures can overlap.",
      "pageTitle": "Phthalate and BPA Urine Testing Claims | Biomonitoring, Exposure, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1970,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a high result mean disease?",
      "answer": "No. Population exposure data do not translate neatly into individual prediction.",
      "pageTitle": "Phthalate and BPA Urine Testing Claims | Biomonitoring, Exposure, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1971,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should I buy a supplement or cleanse?",
      "answer": "No direct proof supports that. Exposure reduction is different from marketed detox claims.",
      "pageTitle": "Phthalate and BPA Urine Testing Claims | Biomonitoring, Exposure, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1972,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is follow-up useful?",
      "answer": "When a repeat test answers a specific source-reduction question rather than just tracking normal variation.",
      "pageTitle": "Phthalate and BPA Urine Testing Claims | Biomonitoring, Exposure, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1973,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does timing matter so much?",
      "answer": "Many metabolite levels reflect short-term exposure and can change from one day to the next.",
      "pageTitle": "Phthalate and BPA Urine Testing Claims | Biomonitoring, Exposure, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1974,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What is the safest use of the panel?",
      "answer": "Use it as exposure context, not as a diagnosis or a reason to start a blanket supplement plan.",
      "pageTitle": "Phthalate and BPA Urine Testing Claims | Biomonitoring, Exposure, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/phthalate-bpa-urine-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 1975,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is the tape test done in the morning?",
      "answer": "Pinworm eggs are usually laid overnight, so a morning sample before bathing or toileting is more likely to pick them up.",
      "pageTitle": "Pinworm Tape Test | Morning Collection, Itching, Kids, Household Spread, and Stool Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1976,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a stool test replace the tape test?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Pinworm eggs are often found around the anus rather than in routine stool.",
      "pageTitle": "Pinworm Tape Test | Morning Collection, Itching, Kids, Household Spread, and Stool Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1977,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why treat the whole household?",
      "answer": "Pinworms spread easily through hands, bedding, and surfaces, so shared treatment and prevention steps reduce reinfection.",
      "pageTitle": "Pinworm Tape Test | Morning Collection, Itching, Kids, Household Spread, and Stool Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1978,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative test rule out pinworm?",
      "answer": "Not always. Timing, collection technique, and repeat testing matter, especially if symptoms fit well.",
      "pageTitle": "Pinworm Tape Test | Morning Collection, Itching, Kids, Household Spread, and Stool Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1979,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can children have pinworm?",
      "answer": "Yes. Children are commonly affected, but adults in the household can be infected too.",
      "pageTitle": "Pinworm Tape Test | Morning Collection, Itching, Kids, Household Spread, and Stool Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1980,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician can decide whether repeat tape testing, household treatment, or another diagnosis is the best next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Pinworm Tape Test | Morning Collection, Itching, Kids, Household Spread, and Stool Test Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pinworm-tape-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 1981,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does plasma cells on a CBC differential mean?",
      "answer": "It means plasma cells were mentioned by an analyzer, manual differential, blood smear, or pathologist comment. A few plasma cells can be reactive, but persistent, numerous, atypical, or clonal-appearing plasma cells need closer review with symptoms, CBC trends, chemistry results, and protein studies.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasma Cells on CBC Differential | Smear Review, Reactive Causes, Myeloma Clues, SPEP, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1982,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are plasma cells on a blood smear always multiple myeloma?",
      "answer": "No. Plasma cells can sometimes appear in reactive settings such as infection or immune stimulation. Multiple myeloma and related plasma cell disorders become more important questions when the finding is persistent or numerous, or when it appears with anemia, kidney dysfunction, high calcium, bone pain, high total protein, abnormal globulin, or monoclonal protein results.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasma Cells on CBC Differential | Smear Review, Reactive Causes, Myeloma Clues, SPEP, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1983,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does a pathologist smear review matter?",
      "answer": "A smear or pathologist review can clarify whether cells truly look like plasma cells, whether they appear reactive or atypical, and whether additional testing such as SPEP, immunofixation, serum free light chains, flow cytometry, or hematology review is appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasma Cells on CBC Differential | Smear Review, Reactive Causes, Myeloma Clues, SPEP, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1984,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests are commonly considered after plasma cells are reported?",
      "answer": "Depending on the situation, clinicians may review repeat CBC trends, peripheral smear details, calcium, creatinine, total protein, albumin, globulin, SPEP, immunofixation, serum free light chains, urine protein studies, quantitative immunoglobulins, imaging, or bone marrow testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasma Cells on CBC Differential | Smear Review, Reactive Causes, Myeloma Clues, SPEP, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1985,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What is plasma cell leukemia?",
      "answer": "Plasma cell leukemia is a rare and aggressive plasma cell neoplasm with circulating plasma cells in the blood. A CBC or smear comment alone does not diagnose it, but numerous circulating plasma cells or plasma cells with serious symptoms should be reviewed promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasma Cells on CBC Differential | Smear Review, Reactive Causes, Myeloma Clues, SPEP, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1986,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should plasma cells on a CBC be followed up quickly?",
      "answer": "Follow up promptly if plasma cells are numerous, persistent, atypical, clonal, or paired with anemia, low platelets, kidney dysfunction, high calcium, bone pain, fractures, recurrent infections, unexplained weight loss, severe fatigue, confusion, dehydration, very high total protein, abnormal SPEP or free light chain results, or a pathologist recommendation.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasma Cells on CBC Differential | Smear Review, Reactive Causes, Myeloma Clues, SPEP, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasma-cells-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1987,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does plasminogen do?",
      "answer": "Plasminogen is an inactive precursor made mainly by the liver. It is converted into plasmin, which helps break down fibrin after a clot is no longer needed and helps with wound healing and tissue remodeling.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasminogen Activity Testing | PLG Deficiency, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1988,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is plasminogen activity testing used?",
      "answer": "It is usually used when a clinician is looking for plasminogen deficiency, ligneous conjunctivitis, or a fibrinolysis problem. It is not a routine clot-risk screening test.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasminogen Activity Testing | PLG Deficiency, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1989,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a low result mean inherited plasminogen deficiency?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Mayo notes that acquired causes are more common than hereditary ones, so a low result has to be interpreted with liver disease, DIC, thrombolytic therapy, medications, and the rest of the bleeding story in mind.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasminogen Activity Testing | PLG Deficiency, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1990,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why is antigen testing sometimes ordered too?",
      "answer": "Activity and antigen together can help separate type I deficiency, where both are low, from type II deficiency, where the protein amount may be normal but the protein does not work normally.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasminogen Activity Testing | PLG Deficiency, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1991,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What symptoms point toward PLG-related deficiency?",
      "answer": "Ligneous conjunctivitis, gingival or oral lesions, airway lesions, female genital tract lesions, and other fibrin-rich mucosal growths are classic clues that can send clinicians toward PLG-related testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasminogen Activity Testing | PLG Deficiency, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1992,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does low plasminogen mean I am more likely to clot?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Lab references describe plasminogen deficiency as a fibrinolysis problem rather than a routine thrombosis risk factor, so the main concern is often abnormal clot breakdown or mucosal lesions, not classic clotting excess.",
      "pageTitle": "Plasminogen Activity Testing | PLG Deficiency, Activity vs Antigen, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/plasminogen-activity-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1993,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high platelet count mean?",
      "answer": "A high platelet count is often called thrombocytosis. It means platelets are above the lab's expected range. Many cases are reactive, caused by another condition such as infection, inflammation, iron deficiency, bleeding, surgery, or other stress. Persistent unexplained high platelets may need evaluation for a primary bone marrow condition.",
      "pageTitle": "High Platelet Count | Thrombocytosis, Reactive Causes, Iron Deficiency, Inflammation, Clot Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1994,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do high platelets always mean essential thrombocythemia?",
      "answer": "No. Reactive thrombocytosis is more common than essential thrombocythemia. Essential thrombocythemia is considered when high platelets are persistent and common reactive causes or other myeloproliferative conditions have been excluded.",
      "pageTitle": "High Platelet Count | Thrombocytosis, Reactive Causes, Iron Deficiency, Inflammation, Clot Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1995,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can iron deficiency cause high platelets?",
      "answer": "Yes. Iron-deficiency anemia is a recognized cause of reactive thrombocytosis. Ferritin, iron studies, hemoglobin, MCV, RDW, bleeding history, and menstrual or gastrointestinal blood loss context may help clarify this pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "High Platelet Count | Thrombocytosis, Reactive Causes, Iron Deficiency, Inflammation, Clot Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1996,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When are high platelets urgent?",
      "answer": "Urgent medical guidance is important with symptoms of stroke, chest pain, trouble breathing, one-sided weakness, speech or vision changes, severe headache, painful swollen limb, new confusion, or significant bleeding. Very high counts, abnormal smear findings, or other abnormal CBC lines also deserve prompt clinician review.",
      "pageTitle": "High Platelet Count | Thrombocytosis, Reactive Causes, Iron Deficiency, Inflammation, Clot Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1997,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after high platelets?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC, peripheral smear, ferritin and iron studies, CRP or ESR, infection or inflammation evaluation, liver and kidney tests, and sometimes hematology testing such as JAK2, CALR, MPL, or BCR-ABL1 when platelets stay high without an obvious reactive cause.",
      "pageTitle": "High Platelet Count | Thrombocytosis, Reactive Causes, Iron Deficiency, Inflammation, Clot Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1998,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can high platelets cause both clots and bleeding?",
      "answer": "High platelets are often discussed because of clot risk, especially in primary thrombocythemia, but some people with very high counts or platelet-function problems can also have bleeding. Symptoms, platelet count, cause, and platelet function context all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "High Platelet Count | Thrombocytosis, Reactive Causes, Iron Deficiency, Inflammation, Clot Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 1999,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a low platelet count mean?",
      "answer": "A low platelet count is called thrombocytopenia. Platelets help blood clot, so low counts can raise bleeding risk. The meaning depends on how low the count is, whether it is new or worsening, whether there are bleeding symptoms, whether platelet clumping caused a false low, and whether other CBC values are abnormal.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Platelet Count | Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding Risk, Platelet Clumping, CBC Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2000,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can platelet clumping cause a falsely low platelet count?",
      "answer": "Yes. Platelets can clump in the collection tube or on the sample, which may make an automated platelet count look lower than it really is. A peripheral smear review or repeat sample can help confirm whether the low count is real.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Platelet Count | Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding Risk, Platelet Clumping, CBC Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2001,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is a low platelet count urgent?",
      "answer": "Urgent medical guidance is important with bleeding that does not stop, black or bloody stools, blood in urine or vomit, severe headache, confusion, neurologic symptoms, chest pain, shortness of breath, widespread petechiae or purpura, recent heparin exposure, pregnancy complications, abnormal clotting tests, kidney problems, or a very low platelet count.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Platelet Count | Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding Risk, Platelet Clumping, CBC Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2002,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What causes low platelets?",
      "answer": "Broad causes include decreased platelet production in the bone marrow, increased platelet destruction or use, trapping in an enlarged spleen, medicines, infections, immune thrombocytopenia, liver disease, alcohol, pregnancy-related conditions, nutritional deficiencies, and blood or marrow disorders. The pattern decides which causes are most likely.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Platelet Count | Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding Risk, Platelet Clumping, CBC Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2003,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do hemoglobin, white blood cells, and the smear matter with low platelets?",
      "answer": "Isolated low platelets are interpreted differently from low platelets plus anemia, abnormal white blood cells, blasts, or schistocytes. More than one abnormal blood-cell line or concerning smear findings can raise concern for marrow disease, hemolysis, clotting disorders, severe infection, or other urgent conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Platelet Count | Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding Risk, Platelet Clumping, CBC Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2004,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after low platelets?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include a repeat CBC, peripheral blood smear, platelet count in a different collection tube if clumping is suspected, medication review, liver and kidney tests, PT/PTT and fibrinogen, infection testing, B12 and folate, autoimmune testing, or hematology evaluation when the cause is unclear or the result is severe.",
      "pageTitle": "Low Platelet Count | Thrombocytopenia, Bleeding Risk, Platelet Clumping, CBC Context, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2005,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does platelet function testing measure?",
      "answer": "It measures how well platelets clump and help stop bleeding. Depending on the lab, that may be done with aggregometry, closure-time screening, flow cytometry, or another specialized method.",
      "pageTitle": "Platelet Function Testing | Platelet Aggregation, Aspirin Effect, VWD, and Bleeding Workup",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2006,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can platelet count be normal if platelet function is abnormal?",
      "answer": "Yes. A normal platelet count does not rule out a platelet function problem. That is exactly why this test exists.",
      "pageTitle": "Platelet Function Testing | Platelet Aggregation, Aspirin Effect, VWD, and Bleeding Workup",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2007,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do aspirin and NSAIDs matter so much?",
      "answer": "They can change platelet behavior and sometimes change the test result itself. They may also be the reason the test was ordered in the first place.",
      "pageTitle": "Platelet Function Testing | Platelet Aggregation, Aspirin Effect, VWD, and Bleeding Workup",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2008,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does von Willebrand disease belong in this workup?",
      "answer": "Yes. von Willebrand disease can affect platelet adhesion, so VWF antigen, VWF activity, and factor VIII are often part of the same bleeding workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Platelet Function Testing | Platelet Aggregation, Aspirin Effect, VWD, and Bleeding Workup",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2009,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What can an abnormal result mean?",
      "answer": "It can point toward an inherited platelet disorder, a medicine effect, kidney-related uremia, an autoimmune problem, bone marrow disease, or von Willebrand disease. The rest of the CBC and the bleeding history matter a lot.",
      "pageTitle": "Platelet Function Testing | Platelet Aggregation, Aspirin Effect, VWD, and Bleeding Workup",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2010,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before the draw?",
      "answer": "Ask whether any medicines or supplements should be held, whether the lab needs a fresh specimen, and whether a hematologist should review the result if it is borderline.",
      "pageTitle": "Platelet Function Testing | Platelet Aggregation, Aspirin Effect, VWD, and Bleeding Workup",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/platelet-function-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/platelet-function-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2011,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is PNH inherited?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Most PNH is acquired, not inherited, and arises from a somatic variant in a blood-forming stem cell.",
      "pageTitle": "PNH Flow Cytometry Testing | Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria, Hemolysis, Clots, CD55, CD59, and FLAER",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2012,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is flow cytometry the key test?",
      "answer": "Because it can detect missing GPI-linked proteins such as CD55 and CD59 on red cells, white cells, and sometimes granulocytes with FLAER-based methods.",
      "pageTitle": "PNH Flow Cytometry Testing | Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria, Hemolysis, Clots, CD55, CD59, and FLAER",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2013,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a blood test miss PNH?",
      "answer": "A negative or low-level blood result does not always end the question if suspicion is high; specimen type and assay sensitivity matter.",
      "pageTitle": "PNH Flow Cytometry Testing | Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria, Hemolysis, Clots, CD55, CD59, and FLAER",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2014,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does clone size mean?",
      "answer": "Clone size describes how many blood cells show the PNH pattern, and it helps clinicians judge how much the result may matter clinically.",
      "pageTitle": "PNH Flow Cytometry Testing | Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria, Hemolysis, Clots, CD55, CD59, and FLAER",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2015,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Which other labs are usually checked?",
      "answer": "CBC, LDH, bilirubin, haptoglobin, reticulocyte count, urinalysis, and kidney markers are commonly reviewed alongside the flow result.",
      "pageTitle": "PNH Flow Cytometry Testing | Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria, Hemolysis, Clots, CD55, CD59, and FLAER",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2016,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does PNH always mean dark urine?",
      "answer": "No. Dark urine can happen, especially in hemolysis, but some people present with fatigue, cytopenias, or thrombosis instead.",
      "pageTitle": "PNH Flow Cytometry Testing | Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria, Hemolysis, Clots, CD55, CD59, and FLAER",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pnh-flow-cytometry-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2017,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a polygenic risk score?",
      "answer": "A polygenic risk score combines many common genetic variants into one statistical estimate of risk for a trait or disease. It is a probability tool, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Polygenic risk score interpretation | Risk estimates, ancestry, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2018,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a higher PRS mean I will get the disease?",
      "answer": "No. A higher score usually means higher risk compared with other people in the reference group, but it does not guarantee disease. Family history, age, sex, and other clinical factors still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Polygenic risk score interpretation | Risk estimates, ancestry, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2019,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does ancestry matter so much?",
      "answer": "Many scores are calibrated in specific populations. If the training data do not match your ancestry well, the score can be less accurate or less useful.",
      "pageTitle": "Polygenic risk score interpretation | Risk estimates, ancestry, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2020,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "How is PRS different from single-gene testing?",
      "answer": "Single-gene testing looks for a variant with a stronger effect, while PRS adds many small-effect variants together. The two kinds of results answer different questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Polygenic risk score interpretation | Risk estimates, ancestry, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2021,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a PRS change screening or treatment?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, but only when the score has been validated for that use and a clinician can combine it with family history and standard risk factors. It should not replace usual screening guidelines on its own.",
      "pageTitle": "Polygenic risk score interpretation | Risk estimates, ancestry, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2022,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before acting on a PRS?",
      "answer": "Ask how the score was validated, whether it was built for your ancestry and age group, whether it gives absolute risk or a percentile, and whether a clinician or genetic counselor should interpret it.",
      "pageTitle": "Polygenic risk score interpretation | Risk estimates, ancestry, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/polygenic-risk-score-tests.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2023,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive RET result always mean MEN2?",
      "answer": "A germline pathogenic RET variant can strongly support MEN2 risk, but a RET finding on tumor testing alone does not automatically mean inherited MEN2.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive RET Test Next Steps | Germline vs Tumor, MEN2, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2024,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the first thing to check on the report?",
      "answer": "Check whether the sample was blood or saliva, or whether it came from tumor tissue, because that changes whether the result is about inherited risk or cancer profiling.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive RET Test Next Steps | Germline vs Tumor, MEN2, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2025,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a positive family RET result usually trigger?",
      "answer": "It usually triggers genetics review, MEN2-specific surveillance planning, and targeted testing for relatives who may carry the same variant.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive RET Test Next Steps | Germline vs Tumor, MEN2, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2026,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a RET VUS be managed like a positive result?",
      "answer": "Usually not. A VUS is uncertain and should not be treated like a confirmed pathogenic family variant unless the lab reclassifies it.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive RET Test Next Steps | Germline vs Tumor, MEN2, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2027,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does codon and variant wording matter?",
      "answer": "Different RET variants have different MEN2 risk levels and surveillance timing, so the exact codon and classification can change the next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive RET Test Next Steps | Germline vs Tumor, MEN2, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2028,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help explain the result?",
      "answer": "Genetics and endocrine specialists usually help translate the report into a plan for the person tested and the rest of the family.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive RET Test Next Steps | Germline vs Tumor, MEN2, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-ret-test-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2029,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What should you do first after a positive STI test?",
      "answer": "Confirm which infection was found, contact a clinician or clinic for the right treatment or linkage to care, ask whether partners need testing or treatment, avoid sex until the recommended time, and schedule any retesting that applies.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive STI Test Result | Treatment, Partners, Retesting, Confirmation, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2030,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do chlamydia and gonorrhea need retesting after treatment?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC says people treated for chlamydia or gonorrhea should be retested about 3 months after treatment because reinfection is common, regardless of whether they believe their partners were treated.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive STI Test Result | Treatment, Partners, Retesting, Confirmation, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2031,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When can you have sex again after treatment?",
      "answer": "The timing depends on the infection and treatment. CDC chlamydia and gonorrhea guidance commonly instructs people to avoid sex for 7 days after single-dose therapy or until completing a 7-day regimen, symptoms have resolved, and partners have been treated.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive STI Test Result | Treatment, Partners, Retesting, Confirmation, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2032,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do partners need treatment after a positive STI result?",
      "answer": "Often, yes. Partner steps depend on the infection, timing, symptoms, pregnancy, and local guidance. CDC partner services and EPT guidance may help partners get notified, tested, treated, or linked to care.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive STI Test Result | Treatment, Partners, Retesting, Confirmation, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2033,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does every positive STI result need confirmation?",
      "answer": "No, but some do. HIV screening needs confirmatory testing and linkage to HIV care. Syphilis requires interpretation of treponemal and nontreponemal results. Low-positive herpes blood tests may need confirmatory testing. Chlamydia and gonorrhea NAAT positives are usually acted on, but context still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive STI Test Result | Treatment, Partners, Retesting, Confirmation, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2034,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if symptoms persist after STI treatment?",
      "answer": "Persistent symptoms should be discussed with a clinician. Possibilities include reinfection, untreated partners, wrong body site tested, antimicrobial resistance, another infection, non-STI causes, pregnancy-related concerns, or complications such as PID or epididymitis.",
      "pageTitle": "Positive STI Test Result | Treatment, Partners, Retesting, Confirmation, and Next Steps",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/positive-sti-result-next-steps.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2035,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is post-infectious IBS a diagnosis by itself?",
      "answer": "It is usually a clinical pattern that is considered after ongoing infection, inflammation, celiac disease, medication effects, and other red flags have been checked.",
      "pageTitle": "Post-Infectious IBS Testing Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Calprotectin, Celiac Testing, and Red Flags",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2036,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which stool tests are most useful after gastroenteritis?",
      "answer": "The useful test depends on the exposure. Stool PCR, culture, ova and parasite testing, or targeted antigen or toxin testing may help when infection is still plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "Post-Infectious IBS Testing Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Calprotectin, Celiac Testing, and Red Flags",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2037,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is fecal calprotectin helpful?",
      "answer": "Fecal calprotectin is most helpful when the question is inflammation versus IBS, especially if diarrhea is persistent, nocturnal, bloody, or accompanied by weight loss or anemia.",
      "pageTitle": "Post-Infectious IBS Testing Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Calprotectin, Celiac Testing, and Red Flags",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2038,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why are celiac blood tests part of the workup?",
      "answer": "Celiac disease can look like chronic diarrhea, bloating, iron deficiency, or IBS, so blood tests are often part of the exclusion step when symptoms persist.",
      "pageTitle": "Post-Infectious IBS Testing Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Calprotectin, Celiac Testing, and Red Flags",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2039,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What red flags mean it may not be IBS?",
      "answer": "Blood in stool, fever, weight loss, dehydration, severe pain, anemia, or nighttime diarrhea should push the evaluation toward a broader GI workup rather than a simple IBS label.",
      "pageTitle": "Post-Infectious IBS Testing Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Calprotectin, Celiac Testing, and Red Flags",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2040,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a negative stool PCR rule out infection?",
      "answer": "No. It only means the targets on that panel were not detected in that specimen, so panel coverage, timing, and noninfectious causes still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Post-Infectious IBS Testing Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Calprotectin, Celiac Testing, and Red Flags",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/post-infectious-ibs-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2041,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a postbiotic?",
      "answer": "A postbiotic is generally a preparation of inanimate microorganisms, microbial fragments, or microbial products that may have a health effect. The category is newer and the terminology is still evolving.",
      "pageTitle": "Postbiotic Testing Claims | Supplement Definitions and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2042,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a microbiome report prove I need a postbiotic?",
      "answer": "No. A stool report may raise a question, but it does not prove that a postbiotic is needed, that it will help, or that a company recommendation is clinically validated.",
      "pageTitle": "Postbiotic Testing Claims | Supplement Definitions and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2043,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are postbiotics the same as probiotics?",
      "answer": "No. Probiotics are live microorganisms, while postbiotics are non-living preparations or components. They are related ideas, but they are not interchangeable.",
      "pageTitle": "Postbiotic Testing Claims | Supplement Definitions and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2044,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is a postbiotic automatically safer than a probiotic?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Safety depends on the product, dose, population, and intended use, and supplement quality still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Postbiotic Testing Claims | Supplement Definitions and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2045,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can microbiome testing choose the right postbiotic?",
      "answer": "Usually not on its own. The report may be interesting, but the better question is whether the exact product improved a real outcome in well-done studies.",
      "pageTitle": "Postbiotic Testing Claims | Supplement Definitions and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2046,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I ignore a claim and focus on symptoms?",
      "answer": "If you have persistent digestive symptoms, weight loss, blood in the stool, fever, dehydration, or severe pain, the priority is medical evaluation rather than another supplement claim.",
      "pageTitle": "Postbiotic Testing Claims | Supplement Definitions and Evidence Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/postbiotic-testing-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2047,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is prenatal screening the same as a diagnosis?",
      "answer": "No. Screening estimates risk; diagnostic testing looks directly at fetal or placental cells or amniotic fluid to confirm or rule out selected conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Prenatal Screening vs Diagnostic Genetic Testing | NIPT, CVS, Amniocentesis, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2048,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is cfDNA used?",
      "answer": "Cell-free DNA screening is one prenatal screening option that can estimate the chance of certain chromosome conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Prenatal Screening vs Diagnostic Genetic Testing | NIPT, CVS, Amniocentesis, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2049,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What tests are diagnostic?",
      "answer": "Chorionic villus sampling and amniocentesis are diagnostic tests used when a definitive answer is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Prenatal Screening vs Diagnostic Genetic Testing | NIPT, CVS, Amniocentesis, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2050,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a negative screen still be followed by diagnostic testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. Ultrasound findings, family history, or patient preference can still lead to diagnostic testing even after a negative screen.",
      "pageTitle": "Prenatal Screening vs Diagnostic Genetic Testing | NIPT, CVS, Amniocentesis, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2051,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What can make screening harder to interpret?",
      "answer": "Gestational age, placental mosaicism, twins, maternal factors, and low fetal fraction can all affect interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Prenatal Screening vs Diagnostic Genetic Testing | NIPT, CVS, Amniocentesis, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2052,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help decide next steps?",
      "answer": "A genetic counselor or maternal-fetal medicine specialist can help match the test to the question and explain what a result does and does not mean.",
      "pageTitle": "Prenatal Screening vs Diagnostic Genetic Testing | NIPT, CVS, Amniocentesis, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prenatal-screening-vs-diagnostic-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2053,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What labs are needed before starting PrEP?",
      "answer": "CDC clinical guidance says HIV status must be confirmed before PrEP. Baseline care can also include chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis screening; kidney function before oral PrEP; hepatitis B screening before oral PrEP; and cholesterol and triglycerides before F/TAF.",
      "pageTitle": "PrEP Labs and STI Testing Follow-Up | HIV, Kidney, Hepatitis, and STI Checks",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prep-labs-sti-testing-follow-up.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prep-labs-sti-testing-follow-up.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prep-labs-sti-testing-follow-up.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2054,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does PrEP replace STI testing?",
      "answer": "No. PrEP helps prevent HIV when used as prescribed, but it does not prevent chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, herpes, hepatitis, HPV, BV, yeast, or other infections. Ongoing STI testing remains part of PrEP care.",
      "pageTitle": "PrEP Labs and STI Testing Follow-Up | HIV, Kidney, Hepatitis, and STI Checks",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prep-labs-sti-testing-follow-up.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prep-labs-sti-testing-follow-up.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prep-labs-sti-testing-follow-up.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2055,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a microbiome report prove I need a probiotic?",
      "answer": "No. A report may suggest a hypothesis, but it does not by itself prove that a probiotic will help your symptoms or that you need one.",
      "pageTitle": "Probiotics Test-Based Recommendations | Strain-Level Evidence and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2056,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do probiotics work the same way for every strain?",
      "answer": "No. Probiotic evidence is usually strain-specific and outcome-specific, so a label with only the genus or species is often not enough to judge benefit.",
      "pageTitle": "Probiotics Test-Based Recommendations | Strain-Level Evidence and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2057,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are probiotics safe for everyone?",
      "answer": "Not always. They are often low risk for many healthy people, but caution matters for premature infants, people with severe illness, weakened immune systems, central lines, or other high-risk situations.",
      "pageTitle": "Probiotics Test-Based Recommendations | Strain-Level Evidence and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2058,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a report recommendation be personalized without clinical proof?",
      "answer": "A recommendation can be personalized in the software sense without being clinically proven. The important question is whether the exact product improved a real outcome in studies, not just whether the report looks tailored.",
      "pageTitle": "Probiotics Test-Based Recommendations | Strain-Level Evidence and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2059,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I use food, supplements, or both?",
      "answer": "That depends on the symptom, diagnosis, and evidence. Food patterns may be more useful than supplements for many people, and a dietitian or clinician can help decide what actually matches the clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "Probiotics Test-Based Recommendations | Strain-Level Evidence and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2060,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I ask a clinician instead of following the report?",
      "answer": "If you have persistent digestive symptoms, weight loss, blood in the stool, fever, dehydration, or another red flag, a clinician-directed evaluation matters more than a microbiome suggestion.",
      "pageTitle": "Probiotics Test-Based Recommendations | Strain-Level Evidence and Safety Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/probiotics-test-based-recommendations.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2061,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does prolactin do?",
      "answer": "Prolactin is a hormone made by the pituitary gland. It helps regulate milk production, so it is most relevant when someone has nipple discharge, menstrual changes, fertility questions, or other pituitary symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Prolactin Blood Test | High Prolactin, Irregular Periods, Fertility, and MRI Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2062,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What can raise prolactin besides a prolactinoma?",
      "answer": "Pregnancy, breastfeeding, certain medicines, stress during the draw, exercise, sex, nipple stimulation, thyroid disease, kidney disease, and chest wall irritation can all raise prolactin.",
      "pageTitle": "Prolactin Blood Test | High Prolactin, Irregular Periods, Fertility, and MRI Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2063,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does one high prolactin result mean I need an MRI?",
      "answer": "No. A single high result does not automatically mean a pituitary MRI is needed. Clinicians usually look at the size of the elevation, whether it stays high on repeat testing, symptoms, medications, pregnancy status, thyroid tests, kidney tests, and whether other pituitary problems are possible.",
      "pageTitle": "Prolactin Blood Test | High Prolactin, Irregular Periods, Fertility, and MRI Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2064,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why might my clinician repeat the prolactin test?",
      "answer": "Repeat testing helps sort out mild or unexpected elevations that could be caused by temporary factors such as stress, recent sex or nipple stimulation, exercise, a difficult blood draw, or a medicine effect.",
      "pageTitle": "Prolactin Blood Test | High Prolactin, Irregular Periods, Fertility, and MRI Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2065,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can high prolactin affect periods, fertility, sex drive, or ED?",
      "answer": "Yes. High prolactin can be associated with irregular or absent periods, infertility, low libido, erectile dysfunction, and milky nipple discharge, depending on the cause and the person's sex hormones.",
      "pageTitle": "Prolactin Blood Test | High Prolactin, Irregular Periods, Fertility, and MRI Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2066,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What symptoms make follow-up more prompt?",
      "answer": "Headaches, vision changes, a steadily rising prolactin result, symptoms of other pituitary hormone problems, or a clearly abnormal result with galactorrhea, infertility, or menstrual changes should prompt timely follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Prolactin Blood Test | High Prolactin, Irregular Periods, Fertility, and MRI Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prolactin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2067,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does promonocytes on a CBC differential mean?",
      "answer": "Promonocytes are immature cells in the monocyte lineage. They are not routine peripheral blood findings, so a report mentioning promonocytes should be reviewed with the exact wording, smear or pathology comment, blast percentage, absolute monocyte count, anemia, platelet count, symptoms, and whether urgent hematology follow-up was recommended.",
      "pageTitle": "Promonocytes on CBC Differential | Monocytes, Blast Equivalents, AML Clues, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2068,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are promonocytes the same as regular monocytes?",
      "answer": "No. Monocytes are mature white blood cells. Promonocytes are immature cells between monoblasts and mature monocytes, and they may be treated as blast-equivalent cells in monocytic leukemia evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Promonocytes on CBC Differential | Monocytes, Blast Equivalents, AML Clues, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2069,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does promonocytes on a CBC mean acute myeloid leukemia?",
      "answer": "Not by the word alone, but promonocyte wording can raise concern for acute myeloid leukemia with monocytic differentiation or another marrow disorder. Confirmation depends on smear review, flow cytometry, bone marrow findings, cytogenetic and molecular testing, and clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Promonocytes on CBC Differential | Monocytes, Blast Equivalents, AML Clues, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2070,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does smear review matter for promonocytes?",
      "answer": "A peripheral smear or hematopathology review helps confirm whether abnormal cells are promonocytes, monoblasts, blasts, reactive monocytes, or another immature cell type. Cell identification changes urgency and follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Promonocytes on CBC Differential | Monocytes, Blast Equivalents, AML Clues, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2071,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests may follow a promonocyte report?",
      "answer": "Depending on the case, follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual smear review, hematopathology review, flow cytometry, bone marrow aspiration or biopsy, cytogenetic testing, FISH, molecular testing, chemistry tests, coagulation tests, and urgent hematology evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Promonocytes on CBC Differential | Monocytes, Blast Equivalents, AML Clues, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2072,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should promonocyte wording be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up is important if the report mentions promonocytes, monoblasts, blasts, abnormal immature cells, possible acute leukemia, or urgent review, especially with fever, infection, shortness of breath, severe fatigue, bruising, bleeding, anemia, low platelets, low neutrophils, very high or rapidly changing WBC, weight loss, night sweats, or confusion.",
      "pageTitle": "Promonocytes on CBC Differential | Monocytes, Blast Equivalents, AML Clues, Smear Review, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promonocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2073,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are promyelocytes on a CBC differential?",
      "answer": "Promyelocytes are early granulocyte-line white blood cell precursors. They normally mature in bone marrow. When they are reported in blood, the meaning depends on the whole CBC, smear review, symptoms, and whether blasts, Auer rods, abnormal promyelocytes, or clotting abnormalities are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Promyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Blasts, Auer Rods, APL Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2074,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can infection cause promyelocytes in blood?",
      "answer": "Severe infection, inflammation, recovery from marrow stress, or certain medications can cause a left shift with immature granulocytes. Promyelocytes are earlier cells than bands or metamyelocytes, so the finding still needs careful context and often manual smear review.",
      "pageTitle": "Promyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Blasts, Auer Rods, APL Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2075,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are promyelocytes the same as blasts?",
      "answer": "No. Blasts are less mature precursor cells. Promyelocytes are a later myeloid stage after myeloblasts and before myelocytes. However, promyelocytes plus blasts, Auer rods, anemia, low platelets, or abnormal clotting can raise urgency.",
      "pageTitle": "Promyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Blasts, Auer Rods, APL Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2076,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do promyelocytes mean acute promyelocytic leukemia?",
      "answer": "Not always. A small promyelocyte comment can occur in a broader left-shift pattern, but abnormal promyelocytes, Auer rods, bleeding, low fibrinogen, DIC concern, or a clinician's concern for APL should be treated as urgent.",
      "pageTitle": "Promyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Blasts, Auer Rods, APL Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2077,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests may follow promyelocytes on a CBC?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual peripheral smear review, pathologist or hematopathologist review, flow cytometry, bone marrow aspiration or biopsy, cytogenetic testing, FISH, molecular testing, chemistry tests, and coagulation studies such as PT/INR, aPTT, fibrinogen, and D-dimer.",
      "pageTitle": "Promyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Blasts, Auer Rods, APL Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2078,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should promyelocytes be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Seek prompt medical guidance if promyelocytes are reported with blasts, Auer rods, abnormal promyelocytes, possible acute leukemia, low platelets, bleeding, bruising, fever, severe infection, shortness of breath, confusion, abnormal PT/INR or aPTT, low fibrinogen, or rapid white blood cell changes.",
      "pageTitle": "Promyelocytes on CBC Differential | Left Shift, Blasts, Auer Rods, APL Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/promyelocytes-cbc-differential-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2079,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are these genetic tests or blood activity tests?",
      "answer": "They can be either, depending on the lab order. Some clinicians start with activity or antigen testing and then move to genetic testing if needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Protein C, Protein S, and Antithrombin Testing | Thrombophilia, Blood Clots, Timing, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2080,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can warfarin or heparin make the result look low?",
      "answer": "Yes. Warfarin can lower protein C and protein S, and heparin can complicate antithrombin interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Protein C, Protein S, and Antithrombin Testing | Thrombophilia, Blood Clots, Timing, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2081,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should these tests be done right after a clot?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Acute thrombosis can distort the picture, so timing matters and repeat testing is common.",
      "pageTitle": "Protein C, Protein S, and Antithrombin Testing | Thrombophilia, Blood Clots, Timing, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2082,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a low protein S or antithrombin result always mean inherited disease?",
      "answer": "No. Pregnancy, liver disease, kidney disease, inflammation, vitamin K issues, and medications can all create acquired low results.",
      "pageTitle": "Protein C, Protein S, and Antithrombin Testing | Thrombophilia, Blood Clots, Timing, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2083,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do normal results rule out clot risk?",
      "answer": "No. They only rule out this specific pathway problem, not every inherited or acquired clotting risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Protein C, Protein S, and Antithrombin Testing | Thrombophilia, Blood Clots, Timing, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2084,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should family testing be considered?",
      "answer": "Family testing is most useful when a known familial variant exists and the result would change decisions for relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "Protein C, Protein S, and Antithrombin Testing | Thrombophilia, Blood Clots, Timing, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/protein-c-protein-s-antithrombin-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2085,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should prothrombin G20210A be ordered for every clot?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Testing is most helpful when the result would change a specific decision, not as blanket screening after every clot.",
      "pageTitle": "Prothrombin G20210A Testing | F2 Mutation, Blood Clots, Family Risk, and Thrombophilia Panels",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2086,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does one copy of the variant mean I will get a clot?",
      "answer": "No. It increases risk, but many people with the variant never develop thrombosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Prothrombin G20210A Testing | F2 Mutation, Blood Clots, Family Risk, and Thrombophilia Panels",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2087,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can pregnancy or estrogen change whether testing is useful?",
      "answer": "Yes. Pregnancy, estrogen exposure, and family history are common reasons clinicians discuss the test, but they also affect how the result is interpreted.",
      "pageTitle": "Prothrombin G20210A Testing | F2 Mutation, Blood Clots, Family Risk, and Thrombophilia Panels",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2088,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out clot risk?",
      "answer": "No. It only means this specific F2 variant was not found; other inherited and acquired clotting risks can still exist.",
      "pageTitle": "Prothrombin G20210A Testing | F2 Mutation, Blood Clots, Family Risk, and Thrombophilia Panels",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2089,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should this test be part of a routine thrombophilia panel?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Guidelines emphasize selective testing when the result would change management.",
      "pageTitle": "Prothrombin G20210A Testing | F2 Mutation, Blood Clots, Family Risk, and Thrombophilia Panels",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2090,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should explain the result if it is positive?",
      "answer": "A hematologist, genetic counselor, or other specialist should explain how the result fits with your clot history, medications, and family risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Prothrombin G20210A Testing | F2 Mutation, Blood Clots, Family Risk, and Thrombophilia Panels",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/prothrombin-g20210a-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2091,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a PT/INR blood test measure?",
      "answer": "A PT test measures how long it takes plasma to clot through part of the clotting system. INR is a standardized way to report PT, especially for people taking warfarin.",
      "pageTitle": "PT/INR Blood Test Guide | High INR, Warfarin, Liver, Vitamin K, and Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2092,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a high INR mean?",
      "answer": "A high INR usually means blood is taking longer to clot than expected. Context matters: warfarin, vitamin K intake, liver disease, medicines, supplements, illness, and bleeding symptoms can all affect interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "PT/INR Blood Test Guide | High INR, Warfarin, Liver, Vitamin K, and Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2093,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is INR only for warfarin?",
      "answer": "INR is especially useful for monitoring warfarin because it standardizes PT results across labs. PT/INR may also be ordered for bleeding symptoms, liver evaluation, procedure planning, or clotting-factor questions, but it does not monitor all blood thinners in the same way.",
      "pageTitle": "PT/INR Blood Test Guide | High INR, Warfarin, Liver, Vitamin K, and Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2094,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can diet change INR?",
      "answer": "Yes. For people taking warfarin, changes in vitamin K intake, alcohol use, supplements, antibiotics, and other medicines can affect INR. Do not change warfarin or vitamin K intake without clinician guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "PT/INR Blood Test Guide | High INR, Warfarin, Liver, Vitamin K, and Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2095,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is an abnormal PT/INR urgent?",
      "answer": "Urgency depends on symptoms and context. Heavy bleeding, black or bloody stool, vomiting blood, severe headache, weakness on one side, confusion, chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, major injury, or a very abnormal result while taking an anticoagulant needs prompt medical guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "PT/INR Blood Test Guide | High INR, Warfarin, Liver, Vitamin K, and Bleeding",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pt-inr-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2096,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What genes are usually tested for Gorlin syndrome?",
      "answer": "PTCH1 is the main gene, but SUFU is also important and may be especially relevant when early medulloblastoma is part of the family story.",
      "pageTitle": "PTCH1 genetic testing | Gorlin syndrome, jaw cysts, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2097,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative PTCH1 result rule out Gorlin syndrome?",
      "answer": "No. A negative PTCH1 result does not fully rule it out if the clinical pattern is strong, because some cases involve SUFU, mosaicism, or a broader genetic explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "PTCH1 genetic testing | Gorlin syndrome, jaw cysts, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2098,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does SUFU matter?",
      "answer": "SUFU changes childhood brain-tumor risk and therefore changes how early and how often surveillance may start.",
      "pageTitle": "PTCH1 genetic testing | Gorlin syndrome, jaw cysts, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2099,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What screening may follow a positive result?",
      "answer": "Dermatology, dental imaging, sun protection, and age-specific neurologic or other specialty follow-up may be considered.",
      "pageTitle": "PTCH1 genetic testing | Gorlin syndrome, jaw cysts, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2100,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should children or siblings be tested?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic family variant is known, targeted cascade testing can identify relatives who need earlier surveillance.",
      "pageTitle": "PTCH1 genetic testing | Gorlin syndrome, jaw cysts, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2101,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is Gorlin syndrome just a skin cancer problem?",
      "answer": "No. Skin cancers are a major part of the picture, but jaw cysts, skeletal findings, and childhood brain-tumor risk can also matter.",
      "pageTitle": "PTCH1 genetic testing | Gorlin syndrome, jaw cysts, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ptch1-gorlin-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2102,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a PTEN pathogenic variant mean cancer is certain?",
      "answer": "No. It raises inherited risk, but it does not make cancer certain.",
      "pageTitle": "PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome Genetic Testing | Cowden Syndrome, Cancer Risk, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2103,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a PTEN VUS change care?",
      "answer": "No. A PTEN variant of uncertain significance should not be treated like a confirmed pathogenic result.",
      "pageTitle": "PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome Genetic Testing | Cowden Syndrome, Cancer Risk, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2104,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative PTEN result rule out hereditary risk?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative result can still miss some hereditary explanations if the family pattern fits PTEN-related disease or another syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome Genetic Testing | Cowden Syndrome, Cancer Risk, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2105,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does tumor-only PTEN prove inherited syndrome?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only PTEN alteration can help explain a cancer, but it does not by itself prove germline PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome Genetic Testing | Cowden Syndrome, Cancer Risk, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2106,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "If a familial pathogenic PTEN variant is known, relatives may be offered targeted testing.",
      "pageTitle": "PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome Genetic Testing | Cowden Syndrome, Cancer Risk, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2107,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should counseling clarify first?",
      "answer": "The exact variant, specimen type, Cowden/overlap features, and the personal and family tumor pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome Genetic Testing | Cowden Syndrome, Cancer Risk, and VUS Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/pten-hamartoma-tumor-syndrome-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2108,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are RAD51C and RAD51D mainly about ovarian cancer risk?",
      "answer": "Yes, ovarian risk is usually the main counseling question, although family history can also affect breast-risk discussions.",
      "pageTitle": "RAD51C and RAD51D Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2109,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a RAD51C or RAD51D VUS change care?",
      "answer": "No. A variant of uncertain significance should not be managed like a confirmed pathogenic variant.",
      "pageTitle": "RAD51C and RAD51D Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2110,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out inherited risk?",
      "answer": "Not always. A negative result can still be uninformative if the family history is strong or if another gene explains the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "RAD51C and RAD51D Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2111,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does tumor-only RAD51C or RAD51D prove inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only finding does not by itself prove germline inheritance.",
      "pageTitle": "RAD51C and RAD51D Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2112,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "If a familial pathogenic RAD51C or RAD51D variant is known, relatives may be offered targeted testing.",
      "pageTitle": "RAD51C and RAD51D Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2113,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should counseling clarify first?",
      "answer": "The exact gene, variant, specimen type, ovarian-risk pattern, and whether breast screening questions are driven by family history or the DNA result itself.",
      "pageTitle": "RAD51C and RAD51D Genetic Testing Result Interpretation | Ovarian Cancer Risk, VUS, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rad51c-rad51d-genetic-testing-result-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2114,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does RASopathy genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for inherited changes in RAS/MAPK pathway genes that can explain a Noonan-spectrum, CFC, Costello, or related phenotype.",
      "pageTitle": "RASopathy Genetic Testing | Noonan Spectrum, CFC, Costello, Legius, and Family Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2115,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which genes are usually involved?",
      "answer": "Common genes include PTPN11, SOS1, RAF1, RIT1, LZTR1, KRAS, NRAS, BRAF, MAP2K1, MAP2K2, HRAS, and sometimes SPRED1 or NF1 depending on the overlap question.",
      "pageTitle": "RASopathy Genetic Testing | Noonan Spectrum, CFC, Costello, Legius, and Family Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2116,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative panel rule out a RASopathy?",
      "answer": "No. It can lower the chance, but it does not rule it out because not every cause is detectable on every panel.",
      "pageTitle": "RASopathy Genetic Testing | Noonan Spectrum, CFC, Costello, Legius, and Family Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2117,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When does prenatal testing matter most?",
      "answer": "It matters most when ultrasound findings, a known family variant, or a strong Noonan-spectrum clue changes pregnancy counseling or newborn planning.",
      "pageTitle": "RASopathy Genetic Testing | Noonan Spectrum, CFC, Costello, Legius, and Family Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2118,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why is family history so important?",
      "answer": "Many RASopathies are autosomal dominant, so a known family variant can make targeted testing more useful than a broad panel.",
      "pageTitle": "RASopathy Genetic Testing | Noonan Spectrum, CFC, Costello, Legius, and Family Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2119,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the result is a VUS?",
      "answer": "A VUS should be interpreted cautiously and usually should not be used by itself to make major medical decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "RASopathy Genetic Testing | Noonan Spectrum, CFC, Costello, Legius, and Family Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rasopathy-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2120,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main risk of uploading raw DNA?",
      "answer": "The biggest risk is that you may share sensitive genetic data with a company that can store, analyze, or share it in ways you did not expect.",
      "pageTitle": "Raw DNA Upload Privacy Risks | Genetic Data, Third-Party Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2121,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can I delete my data later?",
      "answer": "Sometimes you can request deletion, but deletion policies vary and may not remove all copies, reports, or data already shared with others.",
      "pageTitle": "Raw DNA Upload Privacy Risks | Genetic Data, Third-Party Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2122,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does GINA protect everything?",
      "answer": "No. GINA helps with some health insurance and employment uses, but it does not cover life insurance, disability insurance, or long-term care insurance.",
      "pageTitle": "Raw DNA Upload Privacy Risks | Genetic Data, Third-Party Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2123,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can family members be affected?",
      "answer": "Yes. Your raw DNA can reveal shared family risk, so what you upload may have implications for relatives as well as for you.",
      "pageTitle": "Raw DNA Upload Privacy Risks | Genetic Data, Third-Party Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2124,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I check before uploading?",
      "answer": "Read the privacy policy for data storage, sharing, research use, advertising, deletion, and security practices before you upload anything.",
      "pageTitle": "Raw DNA Upload Privacy Risks | Genetic Data, Third-Party Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2125,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should a result be confirmed clinically?",
      "answer": "If the result could change screening, treatment, medication, pregnancy planning, or a family decision, clinical confirmation is usually the safer next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Raw DNA Upload Privacy Risks | Genetic Data, Third-Party Reports, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/raw-dna-upload-privacy-risks.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2126,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are reactive lymphocytes the same as blasts?",
      "answer": "No. Reactive lymphocytes are mature immune cells that look activated, often because of infection or immune stimulation. Blasts are immature precursor cells and carry a different level of concern, especially if confirmed on smear or paired with other abnormal CBC findings.",
      "pageTitle": "Reactive Lymphocytes vs Blasts | CBC Wording, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2127,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can reactive lymphocytes look scary on a report?",
      "answer": "Yes. Words like reactive, atypical, abnormal, or blast-like can feel alarming. The exact phrase, whether a human reviewed the smear, symptoms, and the rest of the CBC determine how concerning the result is.",
      "pageTitle": "Reactive Lymphocytes vs Blasts | CBC Wording, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2128,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does possible blasts mean?",
      "answer": "Possible blasts means the lab or analyzer saw cells that may be immature precursor cells. This usually needs prompt clinician review, often with manual smear review and sometimes flow cytometry or hematology input.",
      "pageTitle": "Reactive Lymphocytes vs Blasts | CBC Wording, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2129,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does a manual smear matter?",
      "answer": "A manual peripheral smear lets trained reviewers look directly at cell shape and maturity. It can help clarify whether analyzer flags reflect reactive lymphocytes, atypical lymphocytes, blast-like cells, true blasts, or another pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Reactive Lymphocytes vs Blasts | CBC Wording, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2130,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is flow cytometry used?",
      "answer": "Flow cytometry may be used when blasts, leukemia, lymphoma, or a clonal lymphocyte population is part of the question. It examines markers on cells and helps classify abnormal cell populations.",
      "pageTitle": "Reactive Lymphocytes vs Blasts | CBC Wording, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2131,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should reactive lymphocytes vs blasts be followed up urgently?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up is important if the report says blasts, possible blasts, abnormal lymphoid cells, suspicious cells, or urgent review, or if there are fever, severe illness, bruising, anemia, low platelets, low neutrophils, weight loss, night sweats, enlarged lymph nodes, spleen enlargement, or a rapidly changing count.",
      "pageTitle": "Reactive Lymphocytes vs Blasts | CBC Wording, Smear Review, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reactive-lymphocytes-vs-blasts-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2132,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a low readiness score mean I should skip every workout?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. It is one signal, and symptoms, injury risk, and the type of workout still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Recovery and Readiness Wearables | HRV, Sleep Scores, Training Load, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2133,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can alcohol or travel distort the score?",
      "answer": "Yes. Both can change HRV, sleep, and resting heart rate in ways that look like poor recovery.",
      "pageTitle": "Recovery and Readiness Wearables | HRV, Sleep Scores, Training Load, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2134,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do devices disagree?",
      "answer": "Different sensors, algorithms, and reference points can lead to different readiness values from one brand to another.",
      "pageTitle": "Recovery and Readiness Wearables | HRV, Sleep Scores, Training Load, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2135,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is a sleep score the same as sleep quality?",
      "answer": "No. It is a consumer summary, not a full sleep study.",
      "pageTitle": "Recovery and Readiness Wearables | HRV, Sleep Scores, Training Load, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2136,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can illness show up before I feel sick?",
      "answer": "Sometimes a trend change appears before clear symptoms, but it is not reliable enough to diagnose illness by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Recovery and Readiness Wearables | HRV, Sleep Scores, Training Load, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2137,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should a clinician override the score?",
      "answer": "Whenever symptoms, injury, or medical instructions make the score unsafe to follow.",
      "pageTitle": "Recovery and Readiness Wearables | HRV, Sleep Scores, Training Load, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/recovery-readiness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2138,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does RET allele fraction measure?",
      "answer": "It measures what share of sequencing reads carried the variant in the tested sample, not whether the finding is inherited or tumor-only by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Allele Fraction Questions | MEN2, Mosaicism, Tumor Testing, Germline Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2139,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does sample type matter?",
      "answer": "Because blood, saliva, and tumor tissue answer different questions, and the sample type decides what the number can mean.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Allele Fraction Questions | MEN2, Mosaicism, Tumor Testing, Germline Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2140,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a low allele fraction still matter?",
      "answer": "Yes. A low fraction can raise mosaicism or technical-quality questions that need the lab report and genetics team to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Allele Fraction Questions | MEN2, Mosaicism, Tumor Testing, Germline Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2141,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a higher allele fraction prove germline inheritance?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. The specimen and the clinical context still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Allele Fraction Questions | MEN2, Mosaicism, Tumor Testing, Germline Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2142,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I ask if the report is vague?",
      "answer": "Ask what specimen was tested, whether the lab commented on mosaicism or possible germline origin, and whether a separate germline test is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Allele Fraction Questions | MEN2, Mosaicism, Tumor Testing, Germline Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2143,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can family risk be decided from allele fraction alone?",
      "answer": "No. Family risk needs the exact variant, the sample type, and often confirmatory testing or counseling.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Allele Fraction Questions | MEN2, Mosaicism, Tumor Testing, Germline Testing, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-allele-fraction-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2144,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do C609Y and C618R usually mean on a RET report?",
      "answer": "They are specific RET variants that can appear in MEN2A or familial medullary thyroid cancer contexts when confirmed as germline pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants.",
      "pageTitle": "RET C609Y and C618R report questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, family testing, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2145,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is exact notation important?",
      "answer": "The report should be read by exact notation, classification, sample type, family history, and clinical context rather than by codon label alone.",
      "pageTitle": "RET C609Y and C618R report questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, family testing, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2146,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a tumor-only RET result count as inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only finding is not the same as a confirmed inherited result and usually needs germline follow-up if inherited risk is the question.",
      "pageTitle": "RET C609Y and C618R report questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, family testing, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2147,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if the variant is classified as uncertain?",
      "answer": "An uncertain variant should be handled differently from a clearly pathogenic or likely pathogenic germline result, especially before family testing decisions are made.",
      "pageTitle": "RET C609Y and C618R report questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, family testing, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2148,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives get targeted testing?",
      "answer": "If a familial pathogenic or likely pathogenic RET variant is confirmed, relatives usually need targeted testing for that exact variant, not just a broad RET panel.",
      "pageTitle": "RET C609Y and C618R report questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, family testing, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2149,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should clinicians ask for more detail?",
      "answer": "When the report only gives a codon or variant shorthand, when the sample type is unclear, or when the family plan still needs MEN2A coordination.",
      "pageTitle": "RET C609Y and C618R report questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, family testing, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-c609y-c618r-report-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2150,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is calcitonin discussed after a positive RET result?",
      "answer": "Because calcitonin can help clinicians think about C-cell activity and medullary thyroid cancer context, but it is only one part of follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Calcitonin Follow-Up After Positive Genetic Testing | MEN2, Calcitonin, and Specialist Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2151,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a calcitonin result replace the RET result?",
      "answer": "No. The RET variant and the clinical context still drive the long-term plan.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Calcitonin Follow-Up After Positive Genetic Testing | MEN2, Calcitonin, and Specialist Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2152,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Who should order calcitonin follow-up?",
      "answer": "Usually a clinician familiar with MEN2, such as endocrinology or endocrine genetics, not a do-it-yourself test interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Calcitonin Follow-Up After Positive Genetic Testing | MEN2, Calcitonin, and Specialist Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2153,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a normal calcitonin rule everything out?",
      "answer": "No. Normal calcitonin does not erase the need to interpret the exact RET variant, family history, and age-specific planning.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Calcitonin Follow-Up After Positive Genetic Testing | MEN2, Calcitonin, and Specialist Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2154,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives also get calcitonin testing?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Relatives usually need targeted genetic counseling first, because the family-variant question comes before marker testing.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Calcitonin Follow-Up After Positive Genetic Testing | MEN2, Calcitonin, and Specialist Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2155,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask at follow-up?",
      "answer": "Ask who is coordinating MEN2 surveillance, whether calcitonin is being used as a marker or a screening test, and whether family letters are needed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Calcitonin Follow-Up After Positive Genetic Testing | MEN2, Calcitonin, and Specialist Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-calcitonin-follow-up-after-positive-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2156,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why does RET testing in children get discussed earlier than many other genetic tests?",
      "answer": "Because some MEN2 variants change the age when thyroid or adrenal surveillance starts, so the timing can affect care before adulthood.",
      "pageTitle": "RET cascade testing for children questions | MEN2 family variant, timing, counseling, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2157,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is the child being tested for the exact family variant?",
      "answer": "That is the key question. Targeted testing works best when the report is checking the known familial RET variant rather than just a broad panel.",
      "pageTitle": "RET cascade testing for children questions | MEN2 family variant, timing, counseling, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2158,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a true negative mean for a child?",
      "answer": "If the test was targeted to the known family variant, it is usually a true negative for that variant, but the genetics team still checks whether other follow-up is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET cascade testing for children questions | MEN2 family variant, timing, counseling, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2159,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a RET VUS be used like a positive result?",
      "answer": "Usually not. A VUS is uncertain until the lab reclassifies it, so it should not drive MEN2 management on its own.",
      "pageTitle": "RET cascade testing for children questions | MEN2 family variant, timing, counseling, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2160,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does sample type matter?",
      "answer": "Blood or saliva usually means germline family testing, while tumor-only testing can miss the inherited risk question.",
      "pageTitle": "RET cascade testing for children questions | MEN2 family variant, timing, counseling, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2161,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should explain the result to the family?",
      "answer": "Genetics and endocrine specialists usually help translate the result into a plan for the child, siblings, and the rest of the family.",
      "pageTitle": "RET cascade testing for children questions | MEN2 family variant, timing, counseling, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-cascade-testing-children-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2162,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do RET codons 609, 611, 618, and 620 usually mean?",
      "answer": "They usually refer to specific RET variants in the cysteine-rich region that are discussed in MEN2A and familial medullary thyroid cancer contexts. The codon number alone is not enough for management.",
      "pageTitle": "RET codon 609, 611, 618, and 620 questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, FMTC, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2163,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is exact notation important?",
      "answer": "RET results should be read at the exact protein change level, such as p.Cys618Arg, because codon group language does not tell you the full classification, the sample type, or the family context.",
      "pageTitle": "RET codon 609, 611, 618, and 620 questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, FMTC, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2164,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Are codon 609, 611, 618, and 620 results the same risk?",
      "answer": "No. Codon group language is a shortcut. The exact variant, family history, and report classification can change how the result is interpreted and what follow-up is appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "RET codon 609, 611, 618, and 620 questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, FMTC, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2165,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a VUS at one of these codons drive major decisions?",
      "answer": "Usually not by itself. A variant of uncertain significance should be handled differently from a clearly pathogenic germline RET result.",
      "pageTitle": "RET codon 609, 611, 618, and 620 questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, FMTC, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2166,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does family testing need to match?",
      "answer": "Family testing should target the known familial variant, not just the codon label. That is what makes cascade testing interpretable.",
      "pageTitle": "RET codon 609, 611, 618, and 620 questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, FMTC, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2167,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should clinicians ask for more detail?",
      "answer": "When the report only gives a codon number, when the sample type is unclear, or when the family plan still needs MEN2A or FMTC coordination.",
      "pageTitle": "RET codon 609, 611, 618, and 620 questions | Exact variant, MEN2A, FMTC, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-609-611-618-620-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2168,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does RET codon 634 usually mean?",
      "answer": "Codon 634 variants are classic MEN2A-associated RET findings when they are confirmed as germline pathogenic variants.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 634 MEN2A Questions | C634 Variants, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2169,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does codon 634 automatically prove familial disease?",
      "answer": "No. Tumor-only RET findings can reflect cancer biology, so germline confirmation and specimen type matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 634 MEN2A Questions | C634 Variants, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2170,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do codon 634 results need quick specialist follow-up?",
      "answer": "MEN2A can affect thyroid, adrenal, and sometimes parathyroid planning, so the timing of follow-up can matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 634 MEN2A Questions | C634 Variants, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2171,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can different codon 634 letters change the risk discussion?",
      "answer": "Yes. C634R, C634Y, C634W, C634S, C634F, and other changes may be described differently by the lab and clinician.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 634 MEN2A Questions | C634 Variants, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2172,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up tests are often discussed?",
      "answer": "Calcitonin, thyroid ultrasound, adrenal screening, calcium or PTH, and family cascade testing are common topics.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 634 MEN2A Questions | C634 Variants, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2173,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A genetics team with endocrine experience is usually the right place to connect the variant, age, sample type, and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 634 MEN2A Questions | C634 Variants, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-634-men2a-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2174,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does RET codon 918 usually mean?",
      "answer": "Codon 918, usually written M918T, is strongly associated with MEN2B when it is a confirmed germline pathogenic variant.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 918 MEN2B Questions | M918T, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Childhood Timing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2175,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does codon 918 automatically prove inherited disease?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only RET finding can reflect cancer biology instead of germline risk, so the sample type has to be confirmed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 918 MEN2B Questions | M918T, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Childhood Timing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2176,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is this result treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "MEN2B can be associated with early medullary thyroid cancer risk, so pediatric endocrine and genetics review may be time-sensitive.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 918 MEN2B Questions | M918T, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Childhood Timing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2177,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can codon 918 be de novo?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some MEN2B results are de novo, which is why parent testing and family review still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 918 MEN2B Questions | M918T, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Childhood Timing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2178,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up tests usually come next?",
      "answer": "Calcitonin, thyroid evaluation, adrenal screening, and specialist genetics review are common next steps, depending on the person and age.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 918 MEN2B Questions | M918T, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Childhood Timing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2179,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the report?",
      "answer": "A genetics professional with endocrine expertise is usually the right person to connect the variant, sample type, age, and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon 918 MEN2B Questions | M918T, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Childhood Timing, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-918-men2b-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2180,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a codon number alone tell MEN2A from MEN2B?",
      "answer": "No. Codon numbers help route the question, but the exact amino acid change, report type, and clinical context still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon and Variant Comparison Guide | M918T, Codon 634, V804M, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2181,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is M918T always MEN2B?",
      "answer": "M918T is strongly associated with MEN2B, but the report still needs to be read as germline or tumor and interpreted in context.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon and Variant Comparison Guide | M918T, Codon 634, V804M, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2182,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why can similar RET codons have different counseling?",
      "answer": "Different codons can carry different risk categories, ages of onset, and family-testing implications.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon and Variant Comparison Guide | M918T, Codon 634, V804M, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2183,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if the report says VUS?",
      "answer": "A VUS is not enough to make a family testing or surveillance plan by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon and Variant Comparison Guide | M918T, Codon 634, V804M, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2184,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should tumor-only RET results be used for family testing?",
      "answer": "Not without germline confirmation. Tumor-only findings do not automatically prove inherited risk.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon and Variant Comparison Guide | M918T, Codon 634, V804M, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2185,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should explain the variant to relatives?",
      "answer": "A genetics professional or the ordering specialist should translate the variant into family testing and surveillance steps.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Codon and Variant Comparison Guide | M918T, Codon 634, V804M, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-codon-variant-comparison-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2186,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does de novo mean for a RET variant?",
      "answer": "It means the variant appears to have arisen new in the person tested rather than being clearly inherited from a parent.",
      "pageTitle": "RET De Novo Variant Questions | MEN2, Parents, Mosaicism, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2187,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does de novo mean the family has no risk?",
      "answer": "No. It can change which relatives are most likely affected, but children and sometimes parents still need a careful discussion.",
      "pageTitle": "RET De Novo Variant Questions | MEN2, Parents, Mosaicism, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2188,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does parent testing matter?",
      "answer": "Parent testing helps confirm whether the variant is truly de novo or whether mosaicism or inheritance could still be part of the story.",
      "pageTitle": "RET De Novo Variant Questions | MEN2, Parents, Mosaicism, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2189,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can mosaicism make a de novo-looking result more complicated?",
      "answer": "Yes. Mosaicism can mean the variant is present in only some cells, so sample type and confirmatory review matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET De Novo Variant Questions | MEN2, Parents, Mosaicism, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2190,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should children be tested automatically?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. The exact variant, the inheritance pattern, and specialist guidance should decide whether children need testing.",
      "pageTitle": "RET De Novo Variant Questions | MEN2, Parents, Mosaicism, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2191,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the genetics team?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the result is truly de novo, whether mosaicism was considered, and how MEN2 surveillance and family testing should be coordinated.",
      "pageTitle": "RET De Novo Variant Questions | MEN2, Parents, Mosaicism, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-de-novo-variant-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2192,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Who should write a RET family letter?",
      "answer": "A genetic counselor, endocrinologist, oncologist, or ordering clinician usually writes it so the letter matches the lab report and the family context.",
      "pageTitle": "RET family letter questions | MEN2 cascade testing, relatives, and genetic counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2193,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What should the letter include?",
      "answer": "It should include the exact variant, the syndrome context if known, which relatives may be at risk, and enough information for another clinician to order targeted cascade testing.",
      "pageTitle": "RET family letter questions | MEN2 cascade testing, relatives, and genetic counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2194,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should the letter include every diagnosis detail?",
      "answer": "No. It should include enough information for relatives to act without exposing more private medical detail than they need.",
      "pageTitle": "RET family letter questions | MEN2 cascade testing, relatives, and genetic counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2195,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does exact variant wording matter?",
      "answer": "Targeted family testing depends on the exact familial variant, not just a generic RET-positive phrase.",
      "pageTitle": "RET family letter questions | MEN2 cascade testing, relatives, and genetic counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2196,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can children use the same family letter?",
      "answer": "Yes, but the letter should make clear when pediatric endocrine genetics or age-specific follow-up is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET family letter questions | MEN2 cascade testing, relatives, and genetic counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2197,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should relatives do with the letter?",
      "answer": "They should use it to request targeted genetic counseling and, if appropriate, targeted family-variant testing with the correct lab report details.",
      "pageTitle": "RET family letter questions | MEN2 cascade testing, relatives, and genetic counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-family-letter-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2198,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "When is RET MEN2 testing usually considered?",
      "answer": "It is usually considered when medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, a known family RET variant, or a MEN2-like pattern makes inherited RET risk plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "RET MEN2 genetic testing | Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2199,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does RET testing only matter for thyroid cancer?",
      "answer": "No. MEN2-related RET variants can also affect adrenal pheochromocytoma and parathyroid surveillance, which is why the result can change more than one part of care.",
      "pageTitle": "RET MEN2 genetic testing | Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2200,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does germline testing matter more than tumor-only testing?",
      "answer": "Germline testing tells you whether the change is inherited and relevant to relatives, while tumor-only testing may only reflect the cancer itself.",
      "pageTitle": "RET MEN2 genetic testing | Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2201,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does a positive RET result change?",
      "answer": "It can change thyroid surgery timing, calcitonin and thyroid surveillance, adrenal screening, parathyroid monitoring, and family testing plans.",
      "pageTitle": "RET MEN2 genetic testing | Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2202,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does a negative RET result mean?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance of a known RET cause, but the meaning depends on whether the correct person and correct variant were tested.",
      "pageTitle": "RET MEN2 genetic testing | Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2203,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why does family testing matter?",
      "answer": "If a familial RET variant is known, targeted testing can identify relatives who need MEN2 surveillance and those who do not.",
      "pageTitle": "RET MEN2 genetic testing | Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, and family testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-men2-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2204,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is RET mosaicism?",
      "answer": "It means the RET variant is present in only some of the person’s cells, not every cell.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Mosaicism Questions | MEN2, De Novo Variants, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2205,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does mosaicism rule out MEN2?",
      "answer": "No. It can still be clinically important, but interpretation and family counseling may be more nuanced.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Mosaicism Questions | MEN2, De Novo Variants, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2206,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does blood not always settle the question?",
      "answer": "If the variant is present at a low fraction or in different tissues unevenly, blood may not tell the whole story.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Mosaicism Questions | MEN2, De Novo Variants, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2207,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a low-level result be technical noise?",
      "answer": "Yes. That is one reason clinicians look at the lab’s wording, method, and whether confirmation is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Mosaicism Questions | MEN2, De Novo Variants, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2208,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested right away?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. The purpose of testing matters, and genetics teams often want to clarify whether the result is inherited, mosaic, or tumor-only first.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Mosaicism Questions | MEN2, De Novo Variants, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2209,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask for next?",
      "answer": "Ask whether a second specimen, targeted confirmation, or genetics review would change the interpretation more than more family testing alone.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Mosaicism Questions | MEN2, De Novo Variants, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-mosaicism-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2210,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "When is a negative RET family variant result reassuring?",
      "answer": "It is most reassuring when a known familial RET pathogenic variant was identified in an affected relative and the person tested negative for that exact variant. That is the classic true negative scenario.",
      "pageTitle": "RET negative family variant testing interpretation | True negative, uninformative negative, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2211,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is a negative RET result uninformative?",
      "answer": "It is less definitive when the family variant was never documented, when the wrong relative was tested first, when only tumor testing was done, or when the report wording does not match the family question.",
      "pageTitle": "RET negative family variant testing interpretation | True negative, uninformative negative, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2212,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative RET result rule out MEN2 risk?",
      "answer": "No. It lowers the chance of a known familial RET cause, but the meaning depends on whether the test targeted the exact family variant and whether the clinical story still fits MEN2.",
      "pageTitle": "RET negative family variant testing interpretation | True negative, uninformative negative, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2213,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What should children do if the family RET variant is known?",
      "answer": "Children at risk are usually offered targeted cascade testing with genetics and pediatric endocrine guidance so the result can guide timing of surveillance and family planning.",
      "pageTitle": "RET negative family variant testing interpretation | True negative, uninformative negative, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2214,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does the wording on the report matter?",
      "answer": "Phrases like negative for known familial variant and no pathogenic variant detected can mean very different things. The exact wording helps determine whether the result is truly reassuring or simply incomplete for the family question.",
      "pageTitle": "RET negative family variant testing interpretation | True negative, uninformative negative, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2215,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the family variant was never confirmed in an affected relative?",
      "answer": "That usually makes a negative result harder to interpret. In that setting, the next step is often to confirm the affected relative's result or revisit whether another affected family member should be tested first.",
      "pageTitle": "RET negative family variant testing interpretation | True negative, uninformative negative, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-negative-family-variant-testing-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2216,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the normal comparator sample in paired RET testing?",
      "answer": "It is the non-tumor sample, usually blood or saliva, that the lab uses as the inherited reference when comparing a tumor result.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Normal Comparator Sample Questions | Tumor-Normal Testing, Blood, Saliva, MEN2, and Germline Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2217,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does the sample type matter so much?",
      "answer": "The sample type tells you whether the lab can really compare a tumor finding against a germline reference or only against a limited comparator.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Normal Comparator Sample Questions | Tumor-Normal Testing, Blood, Saliva, MEN2, and Germline Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2218,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can saliva work as the comparator?",
      "answer": "Often it can, but the lab must say whether it was acceptable for the exact question and whether any limitations were present.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Normal Comparator Sample Questions | Tumor-Normal Testing, Blood, Saliva, MEN2, and Germline Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2219,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a normal comparator sample replace germline testing?",
      "answer": "Not always. It can help, but a dedicated germline RET test may still be needed if the inherited-risk question is not fully answered.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Normal Comparator Sample Questions | Tumor-Normal Testing, Blood, Saliva, MEN2, and Germline Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2220,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should happen if the report is vague?",
      "answer": "Vague or mixed wording should usually go back to the ordering specialist or genetics team before relatives act on the result.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Normal Comparator Sample Questions | Tumor-Normal Testing, Blood, Saliva, MEN2, and Germline Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2221,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When does this matter most?",
      "answer": "It matters most when the result could change MEN2 surveillance, medullary thyroid cancer planning, or cascade testing for relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Normal Comparator Sample Questions | Tumor-Normal Testing, Blood, Saliva, MEN2, and Germline Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-normal-comparator-sample-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2222,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is paired tumor-normal testing the same as germline RET testing?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Paired testing compares a tumor with a normal comparator, but a dedicated germline report may still be needed if the question is inherited MEN2 risk.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Paired Tumor-Normal Testing Questions | Tumor Findings, Germline Risk, MEN2, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2223,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does the normal comparator sample matter?",
      "answer": "It tells the lab what DNA is being used as the inherited reference. If the comparator is limited or poorly described, the report may not fully settle inherited-risk questions.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Paired Tumor-Normal Testing Questions | Tumor Findings, Germline Risk, MEN2, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2224,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a tumor RET finding still be inherited?",
      "answer": "Yes. A RET change seen on tumor testing can still turn out to be germline, which is why the report type and follow-up wording matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Paired Tumor-Normal Testing Questions | Tumor Findings, Germline Risk, MEN2, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2225,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is saliva okay as the normal comparator?",
      "answer": "Often it can be, but the lab and the clinical question matter. The report should say whether the sample was acceptable for germline interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Paired Tumor-Normal Testing Questions | Tumor Findings, Germline Risk, MEN2, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2226,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should relatives be tested?",
      "answer": "Usually after a genetics team confirms that the variant is germline or otherwise actionable for the family. A tumor-only result should not be treated as automatic cascade testing.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Paired Tumor-Normal Testing Questions | Tumor Findings, Germline Risk, MEN2, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2227,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should explain a mixed or uncertain report?",
      "answer": "A genetics professional or the ordering specialist should review it, especially if the report mentions somatic, germline, low-level, mosaic, or uncertain wording.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Paired Tumor-Normal Testing Questions | Tumor Findings, Germline Risk, MEN2, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-paired-tumor-normal-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2228,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why does RET testing in children get discussed earlier than many other genetic tests?",
      "answer": "Because some MEN2 variants change the age when thyroid or adrenal surveillance starts, so the timing can affect care before adulthood.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Prenatal and Childhood Testing Questions | MEN2 Timing, Children, Family Variants, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2229,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is prenatal RET testing always recommended?",
      "answer": "No. It is usually a counseling question about whether knowing the fetal or parental result would change family decisions or medical planning.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Prenatal and Childhood Testing Questions | MEN2 Timing, Children, Family Variants, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2230,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a negative family RET result mean for a child?",
      "answer": "If the test was targeted to the known family variant, it is usually a true negative for that variant, but the genetics team still checks whether other follow-up is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Prenatal and Childhood Testing Questions | MEN2 Timing, Children, Family Variants, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2231,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a RET VUS be used like a positive result?",
      "answer": "Usually not. A VUS is uncertain until the lab reclassifies it, so it should not drive MEN2 management on its own.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Prenatal and Childhood Testing Questions | MEN2 Timing, Children, Family Variants, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2232,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does sample type matter?",
      "answer": "Blood or saliva usually means germline family testing, while tumor-only testing can miss the inherited risk question.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Prenatal and Childhood Testing Questions | MEN2 Timing, Children, Family Variants, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2233,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should explain the result to the family?",
      "answer": "Genetics and endocrine specialists usually help translate the result into a plan for the child, siblings, and the rest of the family.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Prenatal and Childhood Testing Questions | MEN2 Timing, Children, Family Variants, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-prenatal-childhood-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2234,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What should I look at first in a RET report?",
      "answer": "Start with whether the report is tumor-only, paired tumor-normal, dedicated germline, suspected mosaic, a VUS, or a known family variant.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Result Follow-Up Roadmap | Tumor, Germline, Mosaicism, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2235,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does sample type matter?",
      "answer": "Because blood, saliva, tumor tissue, and normal comparator samples answer different questions about inherited risk and tumor biology.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Result Follow-Up Roadmap | Tumor, Germline, Mosaicism, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2236,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When does MEN2 family testing belong on the roadmap?",
      "answer": "When a germline RET pathogenic variant or a clearly relevant family variant is confirmed, not just when the gene name appears on a tumor report.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Result Follow-Up Roadmap | Tumor, Germline, Mosaicism, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2237,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "How does mosaicism change the plan?",
      "answer": "It can create a mismatch between tissues and make confirmatory testing, specimen review, or parental testing important.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Result Follow-Up Roadmap | Tumor, Germline, Mosaicism, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2238,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the result is a VUS?",
      "answer": "A VUS needs caution and reclassification planning, not automatic MEN2 cascade testing.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Result Follow-Up Roadmap | Tumor, Germline, Mosaicism, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2239,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask next?",
      "answer": "Ask who is owning the next step, what specimen was tested, whether germline confirmation is needed, and whether relatives should wait for clarification.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Result Follow-Up Roadmap | Tumor, Germline, Mosaicism, MEN2, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-result-follow-up-roadmap.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2240,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a RET risk category actually mean?",
      "answer": "It is a shortcut for how clinicians may think about MEN2 risk, but it only becomes useful when tied to the exact RET variant, sample type, and clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Risk Category Interpretation | MEN2, ATA Risk, Variant Type, and Specialist Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2241,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does the category replace the exact variant?",
      "answer": "No. Codon and protein change matter more than a broad risk label, because different variants have different MEN2 timing and follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Risk Category Interpretation | MEN2, ATA Risk, Variant Type, and Specialist Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2242,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do tumor and germline RET results need different handling?",
      "answer": "A tumor result may help cancer treatment, while a germline result may change inherited-risk and family testing decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Risk Category Interpretation | MEN2, ATA Risk, Variant Type, and Specialist Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2243,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a VUS be assigned a risk category?",
      "answer": "Usually not in the same way as a pathogenic variant. A VUS is uncertain and should not be managed like a confirmed familial RET result.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Risk Category Interpretation | MEN2, ATA Risk, Variant Type, and Specialist Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2244,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do some categories feel urgent?",
      "answer": "Higher-risk categories can imply earlier medullary thyroid cancer planning or more active surveillance, especially in younger people.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Risk Category Interpretation | MEN2, ATA Risk, Variant Type, and Specialist Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2245,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help explain the category?",
      "answer": "A genetics professional with endocrine experience is usually the right person to turn the category into a plan.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Risk Category Interpretation | MEN2, ATA Risk, Variant Type, and Specialist Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-risk-category-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2246,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can RET germline testing use saliva or blood?",
      "answer": "Often yes, but only if the specific lab accepts that specimen for the exact RET question you are trying to answer.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Saliva vs Blood Germline Testing | MEN2, Sample Type, Mosaicism, Family Testing Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2247,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is blood always better than saliva?",
      "answer": "No. The best specimen is the one the lab validates for the test and the one that fits the clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Saliva vs Blood Germline Testing | MEN2, Sample Type, Mosaicism, Family Testing Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2248,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can saliva miss mosaicism or unusual findings?",
      "answer": "It can, depending on the situation. If mosaicism or a blood-specific issue is suspected, another tissue may be more informative.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Saliva vs Blood Germline Testing | MEN2, Sample Type, Mosaicism, Family Testing Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2249,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should family testing use the same specimen type?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Family testing should match the confirmed variant and the lab’s accepted specimen requirements.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Saliva vs Blood Germline Testing | MEN2, Sample Type, Mosaicism, Family Testing Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2250,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the first sample was low quality?",
      "answer": "Low DNA yield, contamination, or poor sample quality can make the lab recommend recollection or another specimen.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Saliva vs Blood Germline Testing | MEN2, Sample Type, Mosaicism, Family Testing Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2251,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What matters more than saliva versus blood?",
      "answer": "The result has to fit the intended use, the lab method, and the clinical question, especially for MEN2 and family-risk decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Saliva vs Blood Germline Testing | MEN2, Sample Type, Mosaicism, Family Testing Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-saliva-vs-blood-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2252,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the difference between tumor-only and germline RET testing?",
      "answer": "Tumor-only testing looks at cancer tissue and can guide treatment; germline testing looks for an inherited variant that may matter to relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Tumor-Only vs Germline Follow-Up | MEN2, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2253,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does sample type matter so much?",
      "answer": "Because blood, saliva, and tumor tissue answer different questions, and the sample type decides whether family risk is being addressed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Tumor-Only vs Germline Follow-Up | MEN2, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2254,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a tumor-only RET result prove MEN2 risk?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. It may raise the question, but germline confirmation is usually what settles inherited risk.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Tumor-Only vs Germline Follow-Up | MEN2, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2255,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does germline testing replace tumor testing?",
      "answer": "No. The two tests answer different questions and can both matter in the same case.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Tumor-Only vs Germline Follow-Up | MEN2, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2256,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can relatives wait until germline confirmation?",
      "answer": "Usually yes, because targeted family testing should follow the correct result type.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Tumor-Only vs Germline Follow-Up | MEN2, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2257,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the oncologist or genetics team?",
      "answer": "Ask what sample was tested, whether the result is somatic or germline, and whether family testing should start now or after confirmation.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Tumor-Only vs Germline Follow-Up | MEN2, Sample Type, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-only-vs-germline-follow-up.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2258,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the difference between tumor RET testing and germline RET testing?",
      "answer": "Tumor RET testing looks at the cancer itself, while germline RET testing looks for an inherited variant in normal tissue such as blood or saliva.",
      "pageTitle": "RET tumor testing vs germline testing | tumor biology, MEN2, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2259,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "If RET is found in the tumor, does that mean it was inherited?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor RET finding can be somatic, so it may be limited to the cancer and not present in the rest of the body.",
      "pageTitle": "RET tumor testing vs germline testing | tumor biology, MEN2, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2260,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "If germline RET is negative, is the tumor question still open?",
      "answer": "Yes. Tumor testing can still matter for cancer biology or treatment even when inherited RET risk looks less likely.",
      "pageTitle": "RET tumor testing vs germline testing | tumor biology, MEN2, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2261,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is paired tumor-normal testing helpful?",
      "answer": "It is helpful when you need to separate somatic from inherited findings and do not want to guess from tumor-only data.",
      "pageTitle": "RET tumor testing vs germline testing | tumor biology, MEN2, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2262,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do relatives need testing after a tumor-only RET finding?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Relatives usually need targeted testing only if a germline pathogenic variant or other inherited-risk clue is confirmed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET tumor testing vs germline testing | tumor biology, MEN2, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2263,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before acting on the result?",
      "answer": "Ask which specimen was tested, what exact variant was reported, whether the result is inherited or somatic, and who is coordinating follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "RET tumor testing vs germline testing | tumor biology, MEN2, and family risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-tumor-testing-vs-germline-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2264,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is RET V804M usually treated differently from RET codon 918?",
      "answer": "V804M is usually discussed in a lower or moderate-risk MEN2 context, while codon 918 is one of the classic highest-risk MEN2B variants.",
      "pageTitle": "RET V804M Variant Interpretation | MEN2A, Familial Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Moderate Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2265,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does V804M automatically mean MEN2A?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. The lab classification, whether the result is germline or tumor-only, and the family history all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET V804M Variant Interpretation | MEN2A, Familial Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Moderate Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2266,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does moderate-risk language matter?",
      "answer": "Moderate-risk language means the variant still matters, but the surveillance and timing may differ from the highest-risk RET patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "RET V804M Variant Interpretation | MEN2A, Familial Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Moderate Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2267,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can V804M be seen in families with medullary thyroid cancer?",
      "answer": "Yes. V804M has been reported in MEN2A or familial medullary thyroid cancer settings, so family testing and specialist review still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET V804M Variant Interpretation | MEN2A, Familial Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Moderate Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2268,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should a tumor-only V804M finding be treated like an inherited result?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Tumor-only RET findings can be somatic, so germline confirmation may be needed before family decisions are made.",
      "pageTitle": "RET V804M Variant Interpretation | MEN2A, Familial Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Moderate Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2269,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help interpret the report?",
      "answer": "Genetics and endocrinology are usually the right team to translate the variant into a family-specific surveillance plan.",
      "pageTitle": "RET V804M Variant Interpretation | MEN2A, Familial Medullary Thyroid Cancer, Moderate Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-v804m-variant-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2270,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a RET VUS mean?",
      "answer": "A RET variant of uncertain significance means the lab found a RET change but does not have enough evidence to call it disease-causing or benign.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Variant of Uncertain Significance Interpretation | MEN2, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, VUS, Reclassification, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2271,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a RET VUS diagnose MEN2?",
      "answer": "No. A VUS does not establish or rule out MEN2 by itself, and it should not be treated like a confirmed pathogenic RET result.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Variant of Uncertain Significance Interpretation | MEN2, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, VUS, Reclassification, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2272,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested for a RET VUS?",
      "answer": "Usually not for medical decision-making alone. Family testing may be considered by genetics specialists in selected situations, but a VUS is not the same as a known familial pathogenic variant.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Variant of Uncertain Significance Interpretation | MEN2, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, VUS, Reclassification, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2273,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a RET VUS be reclassified later?",
      "answer": "Yes. New evidence can move a VUS toward benign or pathogenic, so patients should ask who will notify them if the classification changes.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Variant of Uncertain Significance Interpretation | MEN2, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, VUS, Reclassification, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2274,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if tumor testing found RET but blood testing is negative?",
      "answer": "That pattern can mean a somatic tumor change rather than inherited risk. Tumor-only findings usually need separate germline interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Variant of Uncertain Significance Interpretation | MEN2, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, VUS, Reclassification, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2275,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I talk with genetics or endocrinology?",
      "answer": "Talk with specialists when the result affects thyroid, adrenal, or family-risk decisions, or when the report wording is unclear.",
      "pageTitle": "RET Variant of Uncertain Significance Interpretation | MEN2, Medullary Thyroid Cancer, VUS, Reclassification, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-variant-uncertain-significance-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2276,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main difference between RET and VHL testing?",
      "answer": "RET testing is usually looking for MEN2, especially medullary thyroid cancer risk and pheochromocytoma. VHL testing is looking for a broader multi-organ syndrome that can include kidney cancer, CNS or retinal hemangioblastomas, pancreatic lesions, and pheochromocytoma.",
      "pageTitle": "RET vs VHL pheochromocytoma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2277,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When does RET become more likely?",
      "answer": "RET becomes more likely when medullary thyroid cancer, elevated calcitonin, parathyroid disease, or a known family RET variant is present. MEN2A and MEN2B each bring distinct surveillance and family-testing questions.",
      "pageTitle": "RET vs VHL pheochromocytoma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2278,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When does VHL become more likely?",
      "answer": "VHL becomes more likely when kidney cancer, hemangioblastomas, pancreatic lesions, endolymphatic sac tumors, or a family pattern of multi-organ VHL findings is present.",
      "pageTitle": "RET vs VHL pheochromocytoma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2279,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out hereditary PPGL?",
      "answer": "No. A negative RET or VHL result does not rule out hereditary PPGL. Other genes such as SDHx, TMEM127, MAX, NF1, and EPAS1 can still explain the tumor pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "RET vs VHL pheochromocytoma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2280,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested if one gene is positive?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic germline variant is confirmed, first-degree relatives are often offered targeted testing for the known family variant. If the result is tumor-only or uncertain, the family plan is different.",
      "pageTitle": "RET vs VHL pheochromocytoma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2281,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up tests matter after either result?",
      "answer": "Thyroid, adrenal, kidney, and neuroimaging follow-up can matter depending on the gene. Genetics helps guide surveillance, but the family history and tumor features still have to be reviewed.",
      "pageTitle": "RET vs VHL pheochromocytoma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vs-vhl-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2282,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What makes a RET result a VUS?",
      "answer": "It means the lab does not yet know whether the variant causes disease, so the finding is not treated like a confirmed MEN2 family variant.",
      "pageTitle": "RET VUS Family Testing Questions | Variant of Uncertain Significance, MEN2, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2283,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested automatically?",
      "answer": "Usually no. Family testing should be guided by genetics and the reason for testing, not by the VUS alone.",
      "pageTitle": "RET VUS Family Testing Questions | Variant of Uncertain Significance, MEN2, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2284,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can family testing ever help with a VUS?",
      "answer": "Sometimes yes, if a genetics team is gathering segregation evidence or trying to clarify the result, but that is different from routine cascade testing.",
      "pageTitle": "RET VUS Family Testing Questions | Variant of Uncertain Significance, MEN2, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2285,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if the VUS is later reclassified?",
      "answer": "The plan can change, which is why reclassification tracking matters.",
      "pageTitle": "RET VUS Family Testing Questions | Variant of Uncertain Significance, MEN2, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2286,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a RET VUS rule out MEN2?",
      "answer": "No. It just means the variant itself is uncertain, so personal and family history still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "RET VUS Family Testing Questions | Variant of Uncertain Significance, MEN2, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2287,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the genetics team?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the goal is medical decision-making or evidence gathering, who will watch for reclassification, and whether any relatives should wait for a clarified result.",
      "pageTitle": "RET VUS Family Testing Questions | Variant of Uncertain Significance, MEN2, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/ret-vus-family-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2288,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a reticulocyte count measure?",
      "answer": "A reticulocyte count measures young red blood cells that have recently left the bone marrow. It helps show whether the marrow is making new red blood cells in response to anemia, blood loss, treatment, or red-cell destruction.",
      "pageTitle": "Reticulocyte Count Test Guide | High, Low, Corrected Retic, Anemia, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2289,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a high reticulocyte count mean?",
      "answer": "A high reticulocyte count can mean the bone marrow is responding to blood loss, hemolysis, recovery after treatment, or another situation where more red blood cells are being produced. It must be interpreted with hemoglobin, hematocrit, CBC indices, bilirubin, LDH, haptoglobin, iron studies, symptoms, and timing.",
      "pageTitle": "Reticulocyte Count Test Guide | High, Low, Corrected Retic, Anemia, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2290,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a low reticulocyte count mean?",
      "answer": "A low or inappropriately normal reticulocyte count in anemia can suggest underproduction of red blood cells. Possible contexts include iron deficiency, B12 or folate deficiency, kidney disease, inflammation, bone marrow disorders, some medicines, infection, or recent severe illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Reticulocyte Count Test Guide | High, Low, Corrected Retic, Anemia, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2291,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does corrected reticulocyte count matter?",
      "answer": "A reticulocyte percentage can look higher when the total red blood cell count is low. Corrected reticulocyte count and absolute reticulocyte count help show whether marrow production is truly high enough for the degree of anemia.",
      "pageTitle": "Reticulocyte Count Test Guide | High, Low, Corrected Retic, Anemia, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2292,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can reticulocyte count diagnose the cause of anemia by itself?",
      "answer": "No. Reticulocyte count is a direction-setting clue, not a final diagnosis. It helps separate increased loss or destruction from reduced production, but the cause usually needs CBC patterns, iron studies, B12 and folate, kidney tests, hemolysis labs, smear review, and clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Reticulocyte Count Test Guide | High, Low, Corrected Retic, Anemia, and Hemolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/reticulocyte-count-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2293,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main use of rotavirus stool testing?",
      "answer": "Rotavirus stool testing is most useful when a diagnosis changes care, outbreak response, infection-control steps, or public-health reporting. Many individual cases are still diagnosed clinically.",
      "pageTitle": "Rotavirus Stool Test | RT-PCR, Antigen, Whole Stool, Vaccination, and Outbreak Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2294,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which test method is most helpful?",
      "answer": "CDC says rotavirus can be detected by antigen-detection immunoassays or nucleic acid detection PCR assays on stool specimens, and RT-PCR or qRT-PCR is often the more flexible choice when molecular testing is available.",
      "pageTitle": "Rotavirus Stool Test | RT-PCR, Antigen, Whole Stool, Vaccination, and Outbreak Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2295,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does whole stool matter?",
      "answer": "Whole stool is the practical specimen for stool-based diagnosis and outbreak work. Timing, refrigeration, and whether the specimen was collected soon after onset all affect the quality of the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Rotavirus Stool Test | RT-PCR, Antigen, Whole Stool, Vaccination, and Outbreak Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2296,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does vaccination make testing useless?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says vaccination has greatly reduced disease burden, but cases and outbreaks still occur. Vaccination status is part of interpretation, not a reason to ignore a positive test.",
      "pageTitle": "Rotavirus Stool Test | RT-PCR, Antigen, Whole Stool, Vaccination, and Outbreak Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2297,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is a GI panel better than a single rotavirus test?",
      "answer": "A GI panel can help when several pathogens are plausible or when the clinical picture is not specific. It does not replace context, because a positive result still has to be matched to symptoms, age, and severity.",
      "pageTitle": "Rotavirus Stool Test | RT-PCR, Antigen, Whole Stool, Vaccination, and Outbreak Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2298,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should rotavirus outbreaks be reported?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends surveillance and reporting for rotavirus activity and says outbreak or cluster situations should be handled with public-health awareness, especially in childcare, school, or facility settings.",
      "pageTitle": "Rotavirus Stool Test | RT-PCR, Antigen, Whole Stool, Vaccination, and Outbreak Context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rotavirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2299,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is rouleaux on a blood smear?",
      "answer": "Rouleaux is a pattern where red blood cells line up in linear stacks, often described as coin stacks. It usually points to changes in the plasma that reduce the normal separation between cells.",
      "pageTitle": "Rouleaux on Blood Smear Interpretation | Stacked Red Cells, ESR, SPEP, High Protein, Myeloma, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2300,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is rouleaux the same as agglutination?",
      "answer": "No. Rouleaux is usually linked to high protein states, while agglutination is a different clumping pattern that can be seen with cold agglutinins. The distinction matters because the causes and next steps are different.",
      "pageTitle": "Rouleaux on Blood Smear Interpretation | Stacked Red Cells, ESR, SPEP, High Protein, Myeloma, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2301,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does rouleaux always mean multiple myeloma?",
      "answer": "No. Multiple myeloma is one possible cause, but inflammation, infection, autoimmune disease, chronic liver disease, Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia, MGUS, and other high-protein states can also fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Rouleaux on Blood Smear Interpretation | Stacked Red Cells, ESR, SPEP, High Protein, Myeloma, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2302,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does ESR rise when rouleaux is present?",
      "answer": "Rouleaux can make red cells settle faster in the ESR tube. That is why an elevated ESR can travel with inflammation or high protein states that also make rouleaux more likely.",
      "pageTitle": "Rouleaux on Blood Smear Interpretation | Stacked Red Cells, ESR, SPEP, High Protein, Myeloma, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2303,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tests are often checked next?",
      "answer": "Clinicians often look at total protein, albumin, globulin gap, ESR, CRP, CBC, creatinine, calcium, and sometimes serum protein electrophoresis or immunofixation when a paraprotein question is on the table.",
      "pageTitle": "Rouleaux on Blood Smear Interpretation | Stacked Red Cells, ESR, SPEP, High Protein, Myeloma, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2304,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can inflammation alone cause rouleaux?",
      "answer": "Yes. Inflammation can raise fibrinogen and other proteins enough to promote rouleaux, so the finding is not specific for myeloma or another plasma-cell disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Rouleaux on Blood Smear Interpretation | Stacked Red Cells, ESR, SPEP, High Protein, Myeloma, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/rouleaux-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2305,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should everyone get the same annual blood test panel?",
      "answer": "No. Useful testing depends on age, risk factors, symptoms, medications, pregnancy status, family history, prior results, and the decision the result would support. A broad annual panel can create confusing borderline findings without improving care.",
      "pageTitle": "Routine Blood Tests for Preventive Health and Optimization | What to Ask Before Ordering",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/routine-blood-tests-preventive-health-optimization.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/routine-blood-tests-preventive-health-optimization.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/routine-blood-tests-preventive-health-optimization.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2306,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Are optimization blood tests the same as preventive screening?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Preventive screening is tied to evidence-based recommendations for specific groups. Optimization panels may include useful markers, but they should still answer a clear question and have an evidence-based action plan.",
      "pageTitle": "Routine Blood Tests for Preventive Health and Optimization | What to Ask Before Ordering",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/routine-blood-tests-preventive-health-optimization.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/routine-blood-tests-preventive-health-optimization.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/routine-blood-tests-preventive-health-optimization.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2307,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does RUNX1 genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for germline RUNX1 pathogenic variants associated with familial platelet disorder with associated myeloid malignancies, a syndrome that can involve bleeding, low platelets or platelet dysfunction, and MDS or AML risk.",
      "pageTitle": "RUNX1 Genetic Testing for Familial Platelet Disorder | Bleeding, Thrombocytopenia, MDS/AML, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2308,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can platelet counts be normal in RUNX1 families?",
      "answer": "Yes. Platelet counts can be mildly low, normal, or only part of the picture. A bleeding history and platelet function pattern can still matter even when the count is not strikingly abnormal.",
      "pageTitle": "RUNX1 Genetic Testing for Familial Platelet Disorder | Bleeding, Thrombocytopenia, MDS/AML, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2309,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is germline confirmation important?",
      "answer": "A RUNX1 finding on tumor sequencing may be somatic or germline. Confirming the variant in an appropriate non-tumor specimen is what determines inherited family risk.",
      "pageTitle": "RUNX1 Genetic Testing for Familial Platelet Disorder | Bleeding, Thrombocytopenia, MDS/AML, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2310,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do donor questions matter?",
      "answer": "If a related stem-cell donor carries the same germline RUNX1 variant, that donor may not be a safe choice. Donor testing can change transplant planning.",
      "pageTitle": "RUNX1 Genetic Testing for Familial Platelet Disorder | Bleeding, Thrombocytopenia, MDS/AML, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2311,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What findings usually prompt testing?",
      "answer": "Easy bruising, surgical bleeding, thrombocytopenia, abnormal platelet aggregation, or a family history of MDS, AML, or platelet disorder are common reasons to consider testing.",
      "pageTitle": "RUNX1 Genetic Testing for Familial Platelet Disorder | Bleeding, Thrombocytopenia, MDS/AML, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2312,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if RUNX1 testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance that RUNX1 explains the pattern, but it does not rule out other hereditary platelet or myeloid-risk genes or acquired platelet problems.",
      "pageTitle": "RUNX1 Genetic Testing for Familial Platelet Disorder | Bleeding, Thrombocytopenia, MDS/AML, and Donor Selection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/runx1-genetic-testing-familial-platelet-disorder.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2313,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Salmonella PCR always mean I need antibiotics?",
      "answer": "No. Many cases are managed with supportive care only; antibiotics depend on severity and risk factors.",
      "pageTitle": "Salmonella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Bloodstream Risk, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2314,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does follow-up culture matter?",
      "answer": "It can provide an isolate for susceptibility testing and outbreak tracking.",
      "pageTitle": "Salmonella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Bloodstream Risk, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2315,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can Salmonella still be found after symptoms improve?",
      "answer": "Yes. Stool shedding can persist after the acute illness starts to settle.",
      "pageTitle": "Salmonella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Bloodstream Risk, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2316,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What exposures make Salmonella more likely?",
      "answer": "Contaminated food or water, poultry, eggs, beef, produce, reptiles, and animal exposure all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Salmonella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Bloodstream Risk, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2317,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I get more medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care for dehydration, bloody stools, high fever, severe pain, or high-risk conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Salmonella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Bloodstream Risk, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2318,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the result was from a multiplex PCR panel?",
      "answer": "Interpret it with the rest of the clinical picture, and ask whether the lab recommends reflex culture.",
      "pageTitle": "Salmonella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Bloodstream Risk, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/salmonella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2319,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do SAMD9 and SAMD9L tests look for?",
      "answer": "They look for germline pathogenic variants that can cause pediatric or familial marrow failure, monosomy 7-associated disease, MIRAGE syndrome, or ataxia-pancytopenia syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "SAMD9 and SAMD9L Genetic Testing | Inherited MDS, Monosomy 7, Germline Confirmation, Donors, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2320,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why are these genes different from many other blood-cancer genes?",
      "answer": "SAMD9 and SAMD9L can trigger cellular rescue events, chromosome 7 loss, or other clonal changes, so the blood or marrow sample may not fully reflect inherited DNA.",
      "pageTitle": "SAMD9 and SAMD9L Genetic Testing | Inherited MDS, Monosomy 7, Germline Confirmation, Donors, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2321,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why might a blood sample be misleading?",
      "answer": "If blood or marrow is already abnormal, the sample can contain somatic rescue changes or tumor DNA. A validated non-blood specimen may be needed to confirm germline status.",
      "pageTitle": "SAMD9 and SAMD9L Genetic Testing | Inherited MDS, Monosomy 7, Germline Confirmation, Donors, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2322,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does monosomy 7 mean here?",
      "answer": "Monosomy 7 is a red flag for inherited myeloid predisposition in the right clinical context, but it still needs specialist interpretation because it can arise through different paths.",
      "pageTitle": "SAMD9 and SAMD9L Genetic Testing | Inherited MDS, Monosomy 7, Germline Confirmation, Donors, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2323,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does donor selection matter?",
      "answer": "A related donor may share the same germline predisposition, so transplant teams may avoid an untreated family donor until inherited risk is clarified.",
      "pageTitle": "SAMD9 and SAMD9L Genetic Testing | Inherited MDS, Monosomy 7, Germline Confirmation, Donors, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2324,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if SAMD9 or SAMD9L testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance that these genes explain the pattern, but it does not rule out other hereditary marrow-failure genes, somatic disease, or non-genetic causes of cytopenias.",
      "pageTitle": "SAMD9 and SAMD9L Genetic Testing | Inherited MDS, Monosomy 7, Germline Confirmation, Donors, and Family Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/samd9-samd9l-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2325,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive sapovirus stool PCR mean?",
      "answer": "It means sapovirus RNA was detected in the stool sample, but the clinical meaning depends on timing, symptoms, and whether another pathogen also fits better.",
      "pageTitle": "Sapovirus Stool Test | PCR, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Viral Gastroenteritis, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2326,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can sapovirus be part of an outbreak?",
      "answer": "Yes. Sapovirus is a recognized cause of viral gastroenteritis outbreaks, especially in close-contact settings such as long-term care, childcare, and food service clusters.",
      "pageTitle": "Sapovirus Stool Test | PCR, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Viral Gastroenteritis, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2327,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a positive result after recovery mean ongoing illness?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. PCR can remain positive after the peak of illness, so follow-up should focus on symptoms and exposure context.",
      "pageTitle": "Sapovirus Stool Test | PCR, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Viral Gastroenteritis, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2328,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should sapovirus be treated like norovirus?",
      "answer": "The broad clinical approach is similar: supportive care, hydration, and outbreak awareness. The exact result still needs the syndrome and panel context.",
      "pageTitle": "Sapovirus Stool Test | PCR, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Viral Gastroenteritis, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2329,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the panel found sapovirus plus another organism?",
      "answer": "Then the question is which result best explains the case. Co-detection does not mean every organism needs separate treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Sapovirus Stool Test | PCR, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Viral Gastroenteritis, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2330,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the result changes isolation, hydration, outbreak reporting, or whether another test or cause should be considered instead.",
      "pageTitle": "Sapovirus Stool Test | PCR, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Viral Gastroenteritis, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sapovirus-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2331,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are schistocytes?",
      "answer": "They are fragmented red blood cells seen on a blood smear.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Fragmented Red Cells, Hemolysis, TMA, DIC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2332,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do schistocytes always mean thrombotic microangiopathy?",
      "answer": "No. They can also appear with mechanical valves, DIC, HUS, or other hemolysis patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Fragmented Red Cells, Hemolysis, TMA, DIC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2333,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How much is significant?",
      "answer": "The number matters, and ICSH-style reporting uses a percentage. The clinical importance rises when the smear pattern fits hemolysis and thrombocytopenia.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Fragmented Red Cells, Hemolysis, TMA, DIC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2334,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests are usually checked with schistocytes?",
      "answer": "Platelets, hemoglobin, creatinine, LDH, haptoglobin, bilirubin, PT/INR, and aPTT are common follow-up labs.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Fragmented Red Cells, Hemolysis, TMA, DIC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2335,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can artifact cause schistocytes?",
      "answer": "Yes. A poor smear or a tiny isolated number of fragments can be misleading, so the slide quality and overall pattern matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Fragmented Red Cells, Hemolysis, TMA, DIC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2336,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should this be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "When schistocytes appear with low platelets, worsening anemia, kidney injury, neurologic symptoms, or another TMA/DIC pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Fragmented Red Cells, Hemolysis, TMA, DIC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2337,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Which specimen is usually tested for schistosomiasis?",
      "answer": "Stool, urine, or both may be examined depending on the species and exposure history.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistosoma Testing | Stool, Urine, Antibody Tests, Freshwater Exposure, Travel, and Egg Detection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2338,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does one negative sample rule it out?",
      "answer": "No. Eggs can be shed intermittently, so multiple samples are often needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistosoma Testing | Stool, Urine, Antibody Tests, Freshwater Exposure, Travel, and Egg Detection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2339,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is antibody testing useful?",
      "answer": "Serology can help when travel or freshwater exposure fits but eggs are hard to find.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistosoma Testing | Stool, Urine, Antibody Tests, Freshwater Exposure, Travel, and Egg Detection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2340,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does travel history matter so much?",
      "answer": "The likely Schistosoma species depends on where freshwater exposure happened.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistosoma Testing | Stool, Urine, Antibody Tests, Freshwater Exposure, Travel, and Egg Detection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2341,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "How many samples are usually needed?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends collecting three samples on different days to improve sensitivity.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistosoma Testing | Stool, Urine, Antibody Tests, Freshwater Exposure, Travel, and Egg Detection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2342,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask which specimen best fits the species, whether serology is appropriate, and whether urine, stool, or both should be checked.",
      "pageTitle": "Schistosoma Testing | Stool, Urine, Antibody Tests, Freshwater Exposure, Travel, and Egg Detection",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/schistosoma-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/schistosoma-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2343,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an SDHA pathogenic variant mean?",
      "answer": "An SDHA pathogenic variant can be associated with hereditary paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma syndrome and some SDH-deficient tumors, but the result has to be interpreted with the tumor type, family history, and whether the finding came from germline or tumor testing.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHA Paraganglioma Genetic Testing | Low-Penetrance SDHx Results, Pheochromocytoma, GIST, Family Testing, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2344,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is every SDHA finding equally actionable?",
      "answer": "No. A confirmed germline pathogenic variant with a relevant personal or family history is more actionable than an incidental SDHA finding on a broad panel. GeneReviews notes that surveillance is not recommended for incidental SDHA pathogenic variants without personal or family history because penetrance is low.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHA Paraganglioma Genetic Testing | Low-Penetrance SDHx Results, Pheochromocytoma, GIST, Family Testing, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2345,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do people call SDHA low penetrance?",
      "answer": "Different cohorts have estimated quite different risks, and SDHA generally appears less penetrant than several other SDHx genes. That is why SDHA needs careful counseling instead of a one-size-fits-all surveillance plan.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHA Paraganglioma Genetic Testing | Low-Penetrance SDHx Results, Pheochromocytoma, GIST, Family Testing, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2346,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested if SDHA is found?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic germline SDHA variant is confirmed in the family, first-degree relatives are usually offered targeted testing. If the result is tumor-only or a VUS, the family plan may be very different.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHA Paraganglioma Genetic Testing | Low-Penetrance SDHx Results, Pheochromocytoma, GIST, Family Testing, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2347,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What tumors are linked with SDHA?",
      "answer": "SDHA can be seen in paraganglioma, pheochromocytoma, and selected SDH-deficient gastrointestinal stromal tumors, and in some settings the pathology pattern can help guide whether germline testing is still needed.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHA Paraganglioma Genetic Testing | Low-Penetrance SDHx Results, Pheochromocytoma, GIST, Family Testing, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2348,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up is common after SDHA testing?",
      "answer": "Follow-up often includes genetics review, confirmation of sample type, family-history review, and a surveillance discussion that is tailored to the exact variant, the tumor pattern, and whether the finding was incidental or part of a known syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHA Paraganglioma Genetic Testing | Low-Penetrance SDHx Results, Pheochromocytoma, GIST, Family Testing, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdha-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2349,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do SDHx genes do?",
      "answer": "SDHx genes help code for parts of the succinate dehydrogenase complex. When they carry pathogenic variants, they can be linked to hereditary paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHx Paraganglioma and Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | SDHA, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, SDHAF2, Tumor Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2350,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which SDHx gene raises the most metastatic concern?",
      "answer": "SDHB often gets extra attention because of its stronger association with metastatic behavior in PPGL, but the exact tumor pattern still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHx Paraganglioma and Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | SDHA, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, SDHAF2, Tumor Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2351,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does parent-of-origin matter for SDHD or SDHAF2?",
      "answer": "Some SDHx syndromes show parent-of-origin effects, so the family history can matter even when the same variant is shared.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHx Paraganglioma and Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | SDHA, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, SDHAF2, Tumor Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2352,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a tumor-only SDHx finding count as inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A tumor-only finding may be somatic, so germline testing is usually needed before relatives are treated as at risk.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHx Paraganglioma and Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | SDHA, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, SDHAF2, Tumor Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2353,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if blood testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative blood test lowers the chance of an inherited SDHx variant, but it does not always end the question if tumor testing or the clinical picture still suggests a hereditary syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHx Paraganglioma and Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | SDHA, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, SDHAF2, Tumor Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2354,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should review the result?",
      "answer": "A genetics professional or endocrine tumor specialist is often helpful because the gene, tissue type, and family history all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "SDHx Paraganglioma and Pheochromocytoma Genetic Testing | SDHA, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, SDHAF2, Tumor Risk, and Family Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sdhx-paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2355,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does SPEP measure?",
      "answer": "SPEP separates serum proteins into fractions so clinicians can see whether the pattern looks normal, inflammatory, or monoclonal.",
      "pageTitle": "Serum Protein Electrophoresis (SPEP) | Monoclonal Protein, MGUS, and Free Light Chains",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2356,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is an M-spike?",
      "answer": "An M-spike is a narrow peak that can suggest a monoclonal protein, which is why follow-up testing is often needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Serum Protein Electrophoresis (SPEP) | Monoclonal Protein, MGUS, and Free Light Chains",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2357,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does SPEP diagnose myeloma?",
      "answer": "No. SPEP can raise concern for a plasma-cell disorder, but diagnosis depends on the full pattern, symptoms, and additional tests.",
      "pageTitle": "Serum Protein Electrophoresis (SPEP) | Monoclonal Protein, MGUS, and Free Light Chains",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2358,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why are immunofixation and free light chains ordered?",
      "answer": "They help identify the protein type and can catch patterns that SPEP alone may miss, especially light-chain disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Serum Protein Electrophoresis (SPEP) | Monoclonal Protein, MGUS, and Free Light Chains",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2359,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can inflammation change the pattern?",
      "answer": "Yes. Polyclonal or inflammatory changes can alter the globulin fractions without meaning a monoclonal process is present.",
      "pageTitle": "Serum Protein Electrophoresis (SPEP) | Monoclonal Protein, MGUS, and Free Light Chains",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2360,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What usually comes next if the result is abnormal?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up includes immunofixation, serum free light chains, CBC, calcium, creatinine or eGFR, urine testing, and sometimes hematology review.",
      "pageTitle": "Serum Protein Electrophoresis (SPEP) | Monoclonal Protein, MGUS, and Free Light Chains",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/serum-protein-electrophoresis-spep.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2361,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Shiga toxin test always mean O157?",
      "answer": "No. Shiga toxin testing can detect non-O157 STEC too, so the exact result label matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Shiga Toxin and STEC Stool Test | O157, Non-O157, Culture, PCR, and HUS Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2362,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does culture still matter after PCR?",
      "answer": "Culture can support confirmation, serotyping, and public-health reporting, and it may help when a lab needs an isolate.",
      "pageTitle": "Shiga Toxin and STEC Stool Test | O157, Non-O157, Culture, PCR, and HUS Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2363,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should antibiotics be started right away?",
      "answer": "Not without clinician guidance. Antibiotics can be risky in suspected STEC and treatment choices depend on the full clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Shiga Toxin and STEC Stool Test | O157, Non-O157, Culture, PCR, and HUS Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2364,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What symptoms raise HUS concern?",
      "answer": "Little or no urination, paleness, unusual bruising, blood in the urine, marked fatigue, or mental status changes are warning signs.",
      "pageTitle": "Shiga Toxin and STEC Stool Test | O157, Non-O157, Culture, PCR, and HUS Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2365,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can STEC occur without blood in the stool?",
      "answer": "Yes. Bloody diarrhea is common, but STEC can present with watery diarrhea too.",
      "pageTitle": "Shiga Toxin and STEC Stool Test | O157, Non-O157, Culture, PCR, and HUS Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2366,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who needs the fastest follow-up?",
      "answer": "Children, older adults, people with dehydration, or anyone with outbreak exposure or worsening symptoms should be evaluated promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "Shiga Toxin and STEC Stool Test | O157, Non-O157, Culture, PCR, and HUS Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shiga-toxin-stec-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2367,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why does culture matter if PCR already found Shigella?",
      "answer": "Culture can support susceptibility testing, strain tracking, and public-health reporting, which PCR alone may not provide.",
      "pageTitle": "Shigella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Resistance, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2368,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do most people need antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Not always. Many people improve without them, but a clinician may use antibiotics when illness is severe or public-health or resistance concerns are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Shigella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Resistance, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2369,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is resistance such a big deal?",
      "answer": "Resistant Shigella can be harder to treat and may spread longer if the wrong antibiotic is used.",
      "pageTitle": "Shigella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Resistance, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2370,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Who is at higher risk of spreading Shigella?",
      "answer": "People with diarrhea, childcare exposure, food handling jobs, travel exposure, sexual exposure with stool contact, and immunocompromised status can all increase spread risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Shigella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Resistance, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2371,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "How long can symptoms last?",
      "answer": "Shigella symptoms often last several days, but some people have longer illness or bowel changes that take time to normalize.",
      "pageTitle": "Shigella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Resistance, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2372,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I seek urgent care?",
      "answer": "Bloody diarrhea, fever, dehydration, severe pain, or worsening symptoms should be evaluated promptly.",
      "pageTitle": "Shigella Stool Test | Culture, PCR, Resistance, and Public Health Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/shigella-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/shigella-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2373,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a SIBO breath test measure?",
      "answer": "It measures gases exhaled after you drink a substrate such as glucose or lactulose. Hydrogen and methane patterns are used as indirect clues about bacterial or methanogen overgrowth and how the substrate is being fermented.",
      "pageTitle": "SIBO breath test interpretation | Hydrogen, methane, prep, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2374,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a positive breath test proof that SIBO caused my symptoms?",
      "answer": "No. A positive test can support the diagnosis, but symptoms such as bloating, pain, diarrhea, or constipation can also come from IBS, constipation, celiac disease, pancreatic insufficiency, medications, or transit issues.",
      "pageTitle": "SIBO breath test interpretation | Hydrogen, methane, prep, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2375,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does preparation matter so much?",
      "answer": "Antibiotics, probiotics, laxatives, promotility drugs, diet, smoking, and exercise can all affect the breath pattern and make the result harder to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "SIBO breath test interpretation | Hydrogen, methane, prep, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2376,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is the difference between glucose and lactulose testing?",
      "answer": "Glucose is absorbed earlier and may miss more distal overgrowth, while lactulose travels farther and can be more affected by transit into the colon. The choice depends on the clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "SIBO breath test interpretation | Hydrogen, methane, prep, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2377,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does methane mean on the test?",
      "answer": "Methane is often discussed as intestinal methanogen overgrowth and is frequently linked with constipation patterns. It is not identical to hydrogen-predominant SIBO.",
      "pageTitle": "SIBO breath test interpretation | Hydrogen, methane, prep, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2378,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When does a negative test still not end the workup?",
      "answer": "If symptoms and risk factors are still strong, a negative breath test may not fully explain the picture. Clinicians may still review celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, motility disorders, or other causes.",
      "pageTitle": "SIBO breath test interpretation | Hydrogen, methane, prep, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sibo-breath-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sibo-breath-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2379,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a skin temperature spike mean I have a fever?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. Skin temperature is not the same as core body temperature, so a thermometer is needed when fever is the question.",
      "pageTitle": "Skin Temperature Wearables | fever, cycle tracking, illness prediction, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2380,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can wearables diagnose an infection?",
      "answer": "No. Wearable temperature trends can suggest a change from baseline, but they do not identify the cause or replace symptom-based care.",
      "pageTitle": "Skin Temperature Wearables | fever, cycle tracking, illness prediction, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2381,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do cycle trackers use skin temperature?",
      "answer": "Research shows wearable skin temperature can show menstrual-cycle patterns, but it is still a trend tool, not a standalone fertility or ovulation diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Skin Temperature Wearables | fever, cycle tracking, illness prediction, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2382,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can illness prediction alerts be trusted?",
      "answer": "They may be useful as early warnings, but they should not be treated as proof of illness or as a substitute for symptoms and measured temperature.",
      "pageTitle": "Skin Temperature Wearables | fever, cycle tracking, illness prediction, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2383,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What makes skin temperature readings noisy?",
      "answer": "Room temperature, bedding, sleep timing, device fit, circulation, alcohol, and normal physiologic variation can all shift the number.",
      "pageTitle": "Skin Temperature Wearables | fever, cycle tracking, illness prediction, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2384,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do if I feel feverish but the wearable looks normal?",
      "answer": "Use a thermometer and clinical symptoms, not the wearable alone. Fever, chills, trouble breathing, confusion, severe pain, or dehydration should be taken seriously.",
      "pageTitle": "Skin Temperature Wearables | fever, cycle tracking, illness prediction, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/skin-temperature-illness-wearables.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2385,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a sleep tracker diagnose sleep apnea?",
      "answer": "No. It may suggest a pattern, but diagnosis usually needs a sleep study or another medical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Sleep Tracking Accuracy Guide | Wearables, Sleep Stages, HRV, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2386,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does one bad night not matter much?",
      "answer": "Wearable scores can bounce around, so one night is less useful than a trend.",
      "pageTitle": "Sleep Tracking Accuracy Guide | Wearables, Sleep Stages, HRV, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2387,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can quiet wakefulness be mislabeled as sleep?",
      "answer": "Yes. Many devices estimate sleep from movement and heart patterns, so quiet wakefulness can look like sleep.",
      "pageTitle": "Sleep Tracking Accuracy Guide | Wearables, Sleep Stages, HRV, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2388,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should symptoms override the app?",
      "answer": "If there is loud snoring, gasping, daytime sleepiness, insomnia, restless legs, or drowsy driving, symptoms matter more than the score.",
      "pageTitle": "Sleep Tracking Accuracy Guide | Wearables, Sleep Stages, HRV, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2389,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What is the best use of a tracker?",
      "answer": "Use it to spot habits and patterns that help you have a better clinical conversation.",
      "pageTitle": "Sleep Tracking Accuracy Guide | Wearables, Sleep Stages, HRV, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2390,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What medical test is more definitive?",
      "answer": "A sleep study measures breathing, oxygen, brain activity, and other signals more directly.",
      "pageTitle": "Sleep Tracking Accuracy Guide | Wearables, Sleep Stages, HRV, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sleep-tracking-accuracy.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2391,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is SMARCA4 testing used for?",
      "answer": "SMARCA4 testing is usually considered when rhabdoid tumor predisposition syndrome type 2 or a SMARCA4-associated ovarian or rhabdoid tumor pattern is suspected. It is not a generic wellness screen.",
      "pageTitle": "SMARCA4 Genetic Testing | Rhabdoid Tumor Predisposition, SCCOHT, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2392,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a tumor SMARCA4 result always mean inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. A SMARCA4 finding may be somatic, germline, or both. The sample type matters because tumor-only results do not automatically mean the same thing for relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "SMARCA4 Genetic Testing | Rhabdoid Tumor Predisposition, SCCOHT, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2393,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does SCCOHT matter here?",
      "answer": "Small cell carcinoma of the ovary, hypercalcemic type is one of the key tumor patterns linked to SMARCA4. That is why ovarian pathology and age at diagnosis can change how the result is interpreted.",
      "pageTitle": "SMARCA4 Genetic Testing | Rhabdoid Tumor Predisposition, SCCOHT, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2394,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does RTPS2 mean?",
      "answer": "RTPS2 stands for rhabdoid tumor predisposition syndrome type 2. It is the hereditary syndrome most often associated with germline SMARCA4 loss-of-function variants.",
      "pageTitle": "SMARCA4 Genetic Testing | Rhabdoid Tumor Predisposition, SCCOHT, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2395,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should family members be tested if SMARCA4 is found?",
      "answer": "Family testing depends on whether the result is germline and on the variant classification. If a germline pathogenic variant is confirmed, cascade testing may be appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "SMARCA4 Genetic Testing | Rhabdoid Tumor Predisposition, SCCOHT, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2396,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up questions matter most?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the result came from tumor or germline testing, whether SMARCB1 was also assessed, whether the pathology fits RTPS2 or SCCOHT, and whether a genetics specialist should review the report.",
      "pageTitle": "SMARCA4 Genetic Testing | Rhabdoid Tumor Predisposition, SCCOHT, Family Testing, and Counseling",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smarca4-rhabdoid-tumor-predisposition-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2397,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are smudge cells on a CBC or blood smear?",
      "answer": "Smudge cells are disrupted white blood cells seen on a peripheral blood smear. They can occur during slide preparation, but numerous smudge cells are also classically discussed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia when persistent lymphocytosis and small mature lymphocytes are present.",
      "pageTitle": "Smudge Cells on CBC | Blood Smear, Lymphocytosis, CLL, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2398,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do smudge cells always mean CLL?",
      "answer": "No. Smudge cells alone do not diagnose chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Clinicians interpret them with the absolute lymphocyte count, repeat trend, smear appearance, symptoms, physical exam, and flow cytometry when a clonal B-cell process is suspected.",
      "pageTitle": "Smudge Cells on CBC | Blood Smear, Lymphocytosis, CLL, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2399,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can smudge cells be an artifact?",
      "answer": "Yes. Smudge cells can be related to fragile cells breaking during smear preparation, and small numbers may be nonspecific. The report becomes more meaningful when smudge cells appear with persistent lymphocytosis or other concerning findings.",
      "pageTitle": "Smudge Cells on CBC | Blood Smear, Lymphocytosis, CLL, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2400,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why might flow cytometry be ordered after smudge cells?",
      "answer": "Flow cytometry examines markers on blood cells. It can help identify whether a persistent lymphocyte increase is reactive or clonal, and whether the pattern fits CLL, monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis, or another lymphoid condition.",
      "pageTitle": "Smudge Cells on CBC | Blood Smear, Lymphocytosis, CLL, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2401,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What symptoms matter with smudge cells?",
      "answer": "Important context includes swollen lymph nodes, spleen enlargement, unexplained fever, drenching night sweats, weight loss, severe fatigue, frequent infections, easy bruising or bleeding, anemia, low platelets, and a rising lymphocyte count.",
      "pageTitle": "Smudge Cells on CBC | Blood Smear, Lymphocytosis, CLL, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2402,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask if my report says smudge cells?",
      "answer": "Ask for the absolute lymphocyte count, whether lymphocytosis is persistent, whether the smear describes small mature lymphocytes or abnormal cells, whether anemia or platelets are abnormal, and whether repeat CBC, smear review, flow cytometry, or hematology follow-up is appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "Smudge Cells on CBC | Blood Smear, Lymphocytosis, CLL, Flow Cytometry, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/smudge-cells-on-cbc-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2403,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a sodium blood test tell you?",
      "answer": "It measures sodium in the blood, which helps regulate fluid balance, nerves, and muscles. The result is often interpreted with kidney function, hydration, and medications.",
      "pageTitle": "Sodium and Potassium Blood Test Results | Electrolytes, Kidney, Medications, and Urgency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2404,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a potassium blood test tell you?",
      "answer": "It measures potassium in the blood. Potassium is important for heart rhythm, muscles, and nerves, and abnormal values can be clinically important.",
      "pageTitle": "Sodium and Potassium Blood Test Results | Electrolytes, Kidney, Medications, and Urgency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2405,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do sodium and potassium get checked together?",
      "answer": "They often appear together in electrolyte panels and BMP/CMP testing because shifts in one can happen with kidney issues, fluid loss, medications, or acid-base problems.",
      "pageTitle": "Sodium and Potassium Blood Test Results | Electrolytes, Kidney, Medications, and Urgency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2406,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What can make potassium falsely high?",
      "answer": "A hemolyzed sample or collection issues can falsely raise potassium. Labs sometimes recommend repeat testing when the result does not fit the clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Sodium and Potassium Blood Test Results | Electrolytes, Kidney, Medications, and Urgency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2407,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is low sodium urgent?",
      "answer": "Confusion, seizures, severe weakness, or a very low sodium level can be urgent and should be treated as a prompt medical problem.",
      "pageTitle": "Sodium and Potassium Blood Test Results | Electrolytes, Kidney, Medications, and Urgency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2408,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is high potassium urgent?",
      "answer": "True high potassium can affect heart rhythm and can be urgent, especially if there are palpitations, weakness, kidney disease, or a potassium-sparing medication involved.",
      "pageTitle": "Sodium and Potassium Blood Test Results | Electrolytes, Kidney, Medications, and Urgency",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sodium-potassium-blood-test-results.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2409,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are spherocytes?",
      "answer": "Spherocytes are red blood cells that look round and dense, with less central pallor than usual.",
      "pageTitle": "Spherocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Hereditary Spherocytosis, Immune Hemolysis, Bilirubin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2410,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do spherocytes always mean hereditary spherocytosis?",
      "answer": "No. Hereditary spherocytosis is a classic cause, but spherocytes can also appear in autoimmune hemolytic anemia, transfusion reactions, burns, and other hemolysis settings.",
      "pageTitle": "Spherocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Hereditary Spherocytosis, Immune Hemolysis, Bilirubin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2411,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What labs are usually checked with spherocytes?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up includes hemoglobin, reticulocytes, bilirubin, LDH, haptoglobin, MCHC, and a direct antiglobulin test when immune hemolysis is being considered.",
      "pageTitle": "Spherocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Hereditary Spherocytosis, Immune Hemolysis, Bilirubin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2412,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do bilirubin and reticulocytes matter?",
      "answer": "They help show whether red cells are being destroyed faster than usual and whether the marrow is responding by making more new red cells.",
      "pageTitle": "Spherocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Hereditary Spherocytosis, Immune Hemolysis, Bilirubin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2413,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does a positive DAT mean here?",
      "answer": "A positive direct antiglobulin test supports immune hemolysis more than hereditary spherocytosis, although the rest of the clinical picture still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Spherocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Hereditary Spherocytosis, Immune Hemolysis, Bilirubin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2414,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is follow-up more urgent?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up is more important when spherocytes come with jaundice, dark urine, severe fatigue, shortness of breath, fainting, rapidly falling hemoglobin, or other signs of active hemolysis.",
      "pageTitle": "Spherocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Hereditary Spherocytosis, Immune Hemolysis, Bilirubin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2415,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Can a normal DAT rule out hereditary spherocytosis?",
      "answer": "A normal DAT makes immune hemolysis less likely, but it does not by itself prove hereditary spherocytosis. The CBC, smear pattern, family history, and other hemolysis tests still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Spherocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Hereditary Spherocytosis, Immune Hemolysis, Bilirubin, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/spherocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2416,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "When does CDC recommend retesting after chlamydia or gonorrhea treatment?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends retesting people treated for chlamydia or gonorrhea about 3 months after treatment, regardless of whether they believe their partners were treated.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Retesting After Treatment | 3-Month Retesting, Test of Cure, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-retesting-after-treatment.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-retesting-after-treatment.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-retesting-after-treatment.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2417,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is retesting the same as a test of cure?",
      "answer": "No. Retesting usually looks for repeat infection later, often around 3 months. A test of cure is an earlier repeat test used in selected situations to check whether treatment cleared the infection.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Retesting After Treatment | 3-Month Retesting, Test of Cure, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-retesting-after-treatment.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-retesting-after-treatment.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-retesting-after-treatment.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2418,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can you have STI symptoms but negative test results?",
      "answer": "Yes. A negative result may be reassuring only for the infection, body site, sample type, and timing that were tested. Symptoms can also come from non-STI causes or infections not included in a routine panel.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Symptoms but Negative Test Results | What to Ask Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-symptoms-negative-results.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-symptoms-negative-results.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-symptoms-negative-results.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2419,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What should you ask if STI symptoms continue after negative results?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the right body sites were tested, whether the test was done after the relevant window period, whether herpes lesion testing, trichomoniasis, BV, yeast, UTI, Mycoplasma genitalium, or rectal testing should be considered, and when clinician follow-up is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Symptoms but Negative Test Results | What to Ask Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-symptoms-negative-results.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-symptoms-negative-results.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-symptoms-negative-results.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2420,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is routine STI screening the same as testing symptoms?",
      "answer": "No. Routine screening is testing recommended for people who may not have symptoms. Diagnostic STI testing starts with symptoms, exam findings, exposure site, or a specific clinical concern.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Symptoms vs Routine Screening | When Testing Is Diagnostic",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-symptoms-vs-screening.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-symptoms-vs-screening.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-symptoms-vs-screening.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2421,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can you need STI testing even without symptoms?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC says STIs often have no symptoms, and clinicians may recommend testing even when someone feels well because many infections do not cause symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Symptoms vs Routine Screening | When Testing Is Diagnostic",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-symptoms-vs-screening.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-symptoms-vs-screening.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-symptoms-vs-screening.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2422,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do you need a rectal swab after anal sex?",
      "answer": "A rectal swab may be needed after receptive anal sex or rectal symptoms because urine or genital testing can miss rectal chlamydia or gonorrhea. CDC says people who have had oral or anal sex should talk with a healthcare provider about throat and rectal testing options.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Anal Sex | Rectal Swabs, HIV Timing, and Symptoms",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-anal-sex.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-anal-sex.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-anal-sex.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2423,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a urine STI test check the rectum?",
      "answer": "No. A urine STI test answers a genital or urethral question. It does not test the rectum, so rectal exposure or rectal symptoms may require a rectal swab.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Anal Sex | Rectal Swabs, HIV Timing, and Symptoms",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-anal-sex.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-anal-sex.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-anal-sex.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2424,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do you need STI testing after dry humping?",
      "answer": "Often, dry humping through clothing does not require urgent STI testing from that event alone. Testing may matter if there was direct genital-to-genital rubbing, sores, rash, blood, damaged skin, symptoms, semen near the vagina or front hole, oral or anal sex, penetration, shared sex toys, or a partner's positive STI result.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Dry Humping or Genital Rubbing | Risk, Symptoms, and What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-dry-humping-genital-rubbing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-dry-humping-genital-rubbing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-dry-humping-genital-rubbing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2425,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can HIV spread through dry humping or genital rubbing?",
      "answer": "CDC describes touching as extremely low to no risk for HIV, and says HIV transmission requires specific body fluids to contact mucous membranes, damaged tissue, or be directly injected. HIV concern after dry humping usually depends on whether another higher-risk exposure also happened.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Dry Humping or Genital Rubbing | Risk, Symptoms, and What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-dry-humping-genital-rubbing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-dry-humping-genital-rubbing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-dry-humping-genital-rubbing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2426,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do you need STI testing if ejaculation happened outside the body?",
      "answer": "It depends where semen went and what sex happened before ejaculation. Semen on intact external skin or clothing is usually different from semen on a mucous membrane, open sore, vaginal opening, anus, mouth, or from vaginal, anal, or oral sex before ejaculation.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Ejaculation Outside the Body | Semen on Skin, Vulva, Clothes, or Surfaces",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-ejaculation-outside-body.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-ejaculation-outside-body.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-ejaculation-outside-body.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2427,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can pregnancy happen if ejaculation was outside?",
      "answer": "Pregnancy is mainly a concern when semen or pre-ejaculate reaches the vagina or vaginal opening, or when penis-in-vagina sex happened before ejaculation. If pregnancy is possible and not desired, ask promptly about emergency contraception and pregnancy-test timing.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Ejaculation Outside the Body | Semen on Skin, Vulva, Clothes, or Surfaces",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-ejaculation-outside-body.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-ejaculation-outside-body.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-ejaculation-outside-body.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2428,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do you need STI testing after fingering or genital touching?",
      "answer": "Often, fingering, hand jobs, or genital touching without oral, vaginal, or anal sex do not require urgent STI testing. Testing may matter if sores, rash, blood, damaged skin, symptoms, shared sex toys, anal contact, genital-to-genital rubbing, or a partner's positive STI result are part of the situation.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Genital Touching or Fingering | Risk, Symptoms, and What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-genital-touching-fingering.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-genital-touching-fingering.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-genital-touching-fingering.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2429,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can HIV spread through genital touching?",
      "answer": "CDC describes touching as extremely low to no risk for HIV. The possible HIV concern would involve body fluids from a partner with HIV contacting mucous membranes or damaged tissue, such as a cut, sore, or open wound.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Genital Touching or Fingering | Risk, Symptoms, and What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-genital-touching-fingering.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-genital-touching-fingering.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-genital-touching-fingering.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2430,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should you get tested after a new sexual partner?",
      "answer": "Testing after a new partner can be a practical way to protect your health and future partners, especially if condoms or barriers were not used, symptoms appear, your partner has an STI, or you do not know each other's recent testing status.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After a New Partner | What to Test, When to Repeat, and Which Sites Matter",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2431,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can STI testing be done immediately after a new partner?",
      "answer": "Some testing can be useful right away for baseline status or symptoms, but tests can be negative early after exposure. HIV tests, for example, have window periods, so repeat testing may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After a New Partner | What to Test, When to Repeat, and Which Sites Matter",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2432,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What infections are usually part of the first pass?",
      "answer": "A first pass often starts with HIV, syphilis, chlamydia, and gonorrhea, then adds site-specific or exposure-specific tests depending on symptoms, the timing of sex, and the body sites involved.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After a New Partner | What to Test, When to Repeat, and Which Sites Matter",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2433,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Do you need throat or rectal swabs after a new partner?",
      "answer": "If oral or anal sex happened, a throat or rectal swab may be important because urine or genital-only testing can miss exposed sites. Ask which sites were exposed and which tests the clinic actually runs.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After a New Partner | What to Test, When to Repeat, and Which Sites Matter",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2434,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Are at-home STI sample collection kits an option?",
      "answer": "Yes, CDC notes FDA-approved self-collection options for HIV, syphilis, chlamydia, and gonorrhea. They can be useful for access and privacy, but symptoms, sores, or site-specific questions may still need a clinician visit.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After a New Partner | What to Test, When to Repeat, and Which Sites Matter",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2435,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should you repeat HIV or syphilis testing?",
      "answer": "Repeat timing depends on the exposure date and the test used. If an early result is negative, CDC says to retest after the window period for that test and to ask a clinician if symptoms or higher-risk exposure make earlier follow-up necessary.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After a New Partner | What to Test, When to Repeat, and Which Sites Matter",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-new-partner.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2436,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do you need a throat swab after oral sex?",
      "answer": "A throat swab may be relevant after oral sex, especially for gonorrhea and sometimes chlamydia depending on the test used and clinic protocol. CDC says people who have had oral or anal sex should talk with a healthcare provider about throat and rectal testing options.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Oral Sex | Throat Swabs, Blood Tests, and Timing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-oral-sex.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-oral-sex.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-oral-sex.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2437,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a urine STI test check the throat?",
      "answer": "No. A urine test answers a genital or urethral testing question. If the throat was exposed during oral sex, ask whether a throat swab is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Oral Sex | Throat Swabs, Blood Tests, and Timing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-oral-sex.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-oral-sex.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-oral-sex.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2438,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do you need STI testing after precum exposure?",
      "answer": "It depends on where the pre-ejaculate contacted the body. Precum on intact external skin or clothing is usually not an urgent STI testing situation. Penis-in-vagina, penis-in-anus, oral sex, mucous-membrane contact, symptoms, sores, a condom break, or a partner's positive STI result can change the testing plan.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Precum Exposure | HIV, Pregnancy, Symptoms, and Timing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-precum-exposure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-precum-exposure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-precum-exposure.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2439,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can HIV be transmitted by pre-cum?",
      "answer": "NIH and HIV.gov list pre-seminal fluid among body fluids that can transmit HIV when it comes from a person with HIV who has a detectable viral load and reaches a mucous membrane, damaged tissue, or the bloodstream. CDC says HIV is most commonly acquired through anal or vaginal sex or sharing injection equipment.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Precum Exposure | HIV, Pregnancy, Symptoms, and Timing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-precum-exposure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-precum-exposure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-precum-exposure.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2440,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do you need STI testing after sex without ejaculation?",
      "answer": "Possibly. Not ejaculating lowers some pregnancy and fluid-exposure concerns, but it does not make vaginal, anal, oral, or skin-to-skin sex risk-free. Testing should match the body sites involved, symptoms, timing, condom use, partner results, and whether HIV PEP or emergency contraception questions apply.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sex Without Ejaculation | Pulling Out, HIV, Pregnancy, and Timing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sex-without-ejaculation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sex-without-ejaculation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sex-without-ejaculation.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2441,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does pulling out protect against STIs?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says coitus interruptus, also called withdrawal, does not protect against sexually transmitted infections, including HIV. Condoms and other prevention tools answer different questions than pulling out before ejaculation.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sex Without Ejaculation | Pulling Out, HIV, Pregnancy, and Timing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sex-without-ejaculation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sex-without-ejaculation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sex-without-ejaculation.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2442,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What STI testing may be done after sexual assault?",
      "answer": "CDC says an initial examination after sexual assault may include chlamydia and gonorrhea NAATs at sites of penetration or attempted penetration, trichomoniasis testing for females, testing for BV or yeast when symptoms are present, and blood tests for HIV, hepatitis B, and syphilis.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sexual Assault | Exams, PEP, EC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2443,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When does HIV PEP matter after sexual assault?",
      "answer": "CDC says HIV PEP recommendations after sexual assault are made case by case according to risk, and discussion is most time-sensitive when care is sought within 72 hours after the assault.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sexual Assault | Exams, PEP, EC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2444,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do I have to get a forensic exam to get STI care?",
      "answer": "No. You can ask for medical care, STI testing, PEP, emergency contraception, or vaccines even if you do not want evidence collection. A SAFE exam can include several options, and you can ask what is optional before consenting.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sexual Assault | Exams, PEP, EC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2445,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should emergency contraception be discussed after sexual assault?",
      "answer": "Yes, if pregnancy is possible and not desired. CDC recommends discussing emergency contraception when the assault could result in pregnancy, and timing matters because different methods have different windows.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sexual Assault | Exams, PEP, EC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2446,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When are follow-up STI tests usually repeated?",
      "answer": "If initial tests are negative and treatment was not provided, CDC says STI testing can be repeated 1 to 2 weeks after the assault. Syphilis serology can be repeated at 4 to 6 weeks and 3 months, and HIV testing can be repeated at 6 weeks and 3 months when source infection cannot be ruled out.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sexual Assault | Exams, PEP, EC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2447,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can I choose which parts of the sexual assault exam I want?",
      "answer": "Yes. You can ask what each part of the exam does, which pieces are optional, how samples are used, and how results will be shared before consenting.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sexual Assault | Exams, PEP, EC, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sexual-assault.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2448,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can STIs spread through shared sex toys?",
      "answer": "Some infections can spread when sex toys carry genital, vaginal, anal, or blood fluids between people or body sites. CDC recommends not sharing sex toys; if sharing, cover them with a new condom if possible and wash them carefully after each use.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sharing Sex Toys | What to Test, Timing, and Prevention",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sharing-sex-toys.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sharing-sex-toys.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sharing-sex-toys.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2449,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do you need STI testing after sharing a sex toy?",
      "answer": "Testing depends on whether the toy was shared between people or body sites, whether a condom was changed, whether the toy was cleaned, symptoms, partner results, and which body sites were exposed.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Sharing Sex Toys | What to Test, Timing, and Prevention",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sharing-sex-toys.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-sharing-sex-toys.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-sharing-sex-toys.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2450,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should you get STI testing after vacation or travel sex?",
      "answer": "STI testing after vacation or travel sex can be useful, especially after a new, anonymous, multiple, or condomless partner. Testing depends on what happened, timing, symptoms, body sites, pregnancy possibility, HIV risk, and whether follow-up testing is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Vacation or Travel Sex | Timing, PEP, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-travel-sex.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-travel-sex.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-travel-sex.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2451,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is urgent after sex while traveling?",
      "answer": "If HIV exposure is possible and the exposure was within 72 hours, ask urgently about HIV PEP. If pregnancy is possible and not desired, ask about emergency contraception as soon as possible. Symptoms, assault, or severe pain also need prompt care.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Vacation or Travel Sex | Timing, PEP, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-travel-sex.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-after-travel-sex.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-after-travel-sex.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2452,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should you get STI testing after a one-night stand?",
      "answer": "Testing can be useful after a one-night stand or anonymous partner, but the timing depends on what happened, symptoms, body sites, pregnancy possibility, and HIV risk. Same-day testing may be baseline testing, and repeat testing may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After an Anonymous Partner or One-Night Stand | Timing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-anonymous-partner-one-night-stand.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-anonymous-partner-one-night-stand.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-anonymous-partner-one-night-stand.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2453,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can you test immediately after sex with an anonymous partner?",
      "answer": "Some tests may be useful immediately for baseline status or symptoms, but a negative result right after exposure may not be final. CDC says no HIV test can detect HIV immediately after infection, and other testing plans can depend on timing and exposure site.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After an Anonymous Partner or One-Night Stand | Timing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-anonymous-partner-one-night-stand.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-anonymous-partner-one-night-stand.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-anonymous-partner-one-night-stand.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2454,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should both partners get STI testing before stopping condoms?",
      "answer": "Testing both partners before stopping condoms can reduce uncertainty, especially if either person has had other partners since their last test, has symptoms, or has not tested at exposed body sites. Testing does not remove future risk if new exposures happen later.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Before Stopping Condoms With a Partner | What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-before-stopping-condoms.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-before-stopping-condoms.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-before-stopping-condoms.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2455,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a negative STI test prove it is safe to stop using condoms?",
      "answer": "A negative STI test only answers the infections, samples, body sites, and time period covered by that test. It cannot prove future risk, rule out every infection, or replace a shared agreement about exclusivity, new partners, pregnancy prevention, HIV prevention, and follow-up testing.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Before Stopping Condoms With a Partner | What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-before-stopping-condoms.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-before-stopping-condoms.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-before-stopping-condoms.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2456,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should you test right away after a condom breaks?",
      "answer": "Testing right away can help document baseline status or evaluate symptoms, but many infections may not be detectable immediately after exposure. The plan may include urgent care for HIV PEP within 72 hours, emergency contraception if pregnancy is possible, baseline STI tests, and repeat testing later.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Condom Break or Possible Exposure | Timing and PEP",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-condom-break-exposure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-condom-break-exposure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-condom-break-exposure.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2457,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When should you ask about HIV PEP after a possible exposure?",
      "answer": "CDC says possible HIV exposure is a medical emergency and patients should be evaluated rapidly for PEP when care is sought within 72 hours after potential exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After Condom Break or Possible Exposure | Timing and PEP",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-condom-break-exposure.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-condom-break-exposure.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-condom-break-exposure.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2458,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What STI tests are used for discharge?",
      "answer": "Testing depends on where the discharge is coming from. Urethral, vaginal, cervical, and rectal discharge can require different combinations of chlamydia and gonorrhea NAATs, trichomoniasis testing, BV or yeast testing, urine testing, rectal swabs, blood tests, or clinician evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing for Discharge | Urethral, Vaginal, Cervical, or Rectal",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-discharge.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-discharge.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-discharge.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2459,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is vaginal discharge always an STI?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says common infectious causes of vaginal symptoms include bacterial vaginosis, trichomoniasis, and vulvovaginal candidiasis, and cervicitis can also cause abnormal discharge. STI testing may still be needed depending on symptoms and exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing for Discharge | Urethral, Vaginal, Cervical, or Rectal",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-discharge.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-discharge.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-discharge.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2460,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can STIs have no symptoms?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC emphasizes that many sexually transmitted infections can have no symptoms, so testing can matter even when someone feels well.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Guide | What to Test, When to Test, Body Sites, Panels, and At-Home Options",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2461,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is urine enough for STI testing?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, but not always. Urine can be used for some genital chlamydia and gonorrhea testing, but throat or rectal exposure may need throat or rectal swabs, and blood tests are used for infections such as HIV and syphilis.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Guide | What to Test, When to Test, Body Sites, Panels, and At-Home Options",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2462,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the difference between STI self-testing and self-collection?",
      "answer": "A self-test is completed by the person and can produce results directly. Self-collection means the person collects a sample, such as a swab, urine, or blood, and sends it to a laboratory for results.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Guide | What to Test, When to Test, Body Sites, Panels, and At-Home Options",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2463,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a full STI panel test for everything?",
      "answer": "No. A full STI panel is a marketing phrase, not a universal standard. Panels vary and may miss body sites, window periods, herpes lesion swabs, HPV or Pap screening, trichomoniasis, Mycoplasma genitalium, hepatitis tests, or confirmatory syphilis testing.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Guide | What to Test, When to Test, Body Sites, Panels, and At-Home Options",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2464,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should STI testing be repeated?",
      "answer": "Repeat testing depends on the infection, test type, exposure timing, symptoms, pregnancy, PrEP or PEP use, and whether a partner has a known STI. HIV and syphilis blood tests have timing issues, and chlamydia or gonorrhea retesting can be recommended after treatment in some situations.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Guide | What to Test, When to Test, Body Sites, Panels, and At-Home Options",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2465,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Where can someone find low-cost STI testing?",
      "answer": "CDC GetTested can help locate nearby HIV, STI, and hepatitis testing. Local health departments, STI clinics, Title X clinics, community health centers, and some primary-care offices may also offer confidential or low-cost testing.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Guide | What to Test, When to Test, Body Sites, Panels, and At-Home Options",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2466,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "How often should someone with multiple partners get STI testing?",
      "answer": "There is not one schedule for everyone. CDC says testing depends on sexual history, practices, symptoms, partners, and local risk. CDC specifically says gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men should test at least yearly for syphilis, chlamydia, gonorrhea, and HIV, and more frequently, such as every 3 to 6 months, for those with multiple or anonymous partners.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing in Open Relationships or With Multiple Partners | Schedule and Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-open-relationship-multiple-partners.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-open-relationship-multiple-partners.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-open-relationship-multiple-partners.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2467,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is urine STI testing enough for open relationships?",
      "answer": "Not always. CDC says STI testing may require blood, urine, or swabs from the vagina, throat, or rectum. If oral or anal sex is part of the exposure pattern, ask whether throat or rectal testing is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing in Open Relationships or With Multiple Partners | Schedule and Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-open-relationship-multiple-partners.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-open-relationship-multiple-partners.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-open-relationship-multiple-partners.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2468,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should you get tested if a partner has an STI?",
      "answer": "Yes, but testing may not be the only next step. Depending on the infection, timing, symptoms, pregnancy, and HIV risk, a partner exposure can require clinical evaluation, treatment guidance, body-site testing, partner services, or repeat testing.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After a Partner Has an STI | What to Do Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-partner-has-sti.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-partner-has-sti.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-partner-has-sti.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2469,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is it better to test first or get treated after STI exposure?",
      "answer": "It depends on the STI and situation. CDC guidance for chlamydia and gonorrhea includes evaluation, testing, and presumptive treatment for recent sex partners, while HIV exposure within 72 hours can require urgent PEP evaluation. A clinician or sexual health clinic can match the next step to the specific infection.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing After a Partner Has an STI | What to Do Next",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-partner-has-sti.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-partner-has-sti.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-partner-has-sti.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2470,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can pelvic pain be related to an STI?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC PID guidance says sexually transmitted organisms such as gonorrhea and chlamydia are often implicated in pelvic inflammatory disease, but pelvic pain can also come from pregnancy-related, urinary, gynecologic, gastrointestinal, or other causes.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing for Pelvic Pain or Testicular Pain | What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-pelvic-testicular-pain.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-pelvic-testicular-pain.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-pelvic-testicular-pain.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2471,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can testicular pain be related to an STI?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC epididymitis guidance says acute epididymitis can be caused by sexually transmitted infections such as chlamydia or gonorrhea, but sudden or severe testicular pain can also be torsion or another urgent condition.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing for Pelvic Pain or Testicular Pain | What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-pelvic-testicular-pain.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-pelvic-testicular-pain.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-pelvic-testicular-pain.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2472,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should STI testing be done before trying to get pregnant?",
      "answer": "Testing before pregnancy can help identify infections, clarify partner status, and create a treatment or prevention plan before conception. Once pregnancy is confirmed, early prenatal screening is still important even if testing was done before pregnancy.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing for Pregnancy Planning | Before Pregnancy and Prenatal Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-pregnancy-planning.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-pregnancy-planning.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-pregnancy-planning.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2473,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which STI tests are recommended early in pregnancy?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends testing all pregnant women during each pregnancy for HIV, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and syphilis. Chlamydia and gonorrhea testing is recommended for pregnant women under 25 and older pregnant women with increased risk.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing for Pregnancy Planning | Before Pregnancy and Prenatal Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-pregnancy-planning.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-pregnancy-planning.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-pregnancy-planning.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2474,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can an explanation of benefits show STI testing?",
      "answer": "Yes. CMS says an explanation of benefits can include the provider, date of service, service description, charges, insurance payment, and what the patient may owe. That can reveal sensitive testing or visit information to someone who can access the insurance account or mail.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Privacy and Insurance | EOBs, Confidentiality, and Costs",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-privacy-insurance-eob.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-privacy-insurance-eob.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-privacy-insurance-eob.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2475,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can STI testing be free with insurance?",
      "answer": "Sometimes. HealthCare.gov says many preventive services are covered without cost-sharing when provided in network, but coverage varies and zero cost is not guaranteed in every case.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing Privacy and Insurance | EOBs, Confidentiality, and Costs",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-privacy-insurance-eob.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-privacy-insurance-eob.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-privacy-insurance-eob.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2476,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What STI tests are used for genital sores or ulcers?",
      "answer": "CDC genital-ulcer guidance says people with genital, anal, or perianal ulcers should be evaluated, including syphilis testing, herpes NAAT or culture from the lesion, type-specific HSV antibody testing, and HIV testing when HIV status is not already known.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing for Sores, Ulcers, or Rash | HSV, Syphilis, and Mpox Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-sores-ulcers-rash.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-sores-ulcers-rash.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-sores-ulcers-rash.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2477,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a routine STI panel enough for sores or a rash?",
      "answer": "Often no. A routine panel may not include lesion swabs, syphilis follow-up testing, mpox testing, or evaluation for non-STI skin conditions. Sores, ulcers, or an unexplained rash usually need symptom-based clinical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "STI Testing for Sores, Ulcers, or Rash | HSV, Syphilis, and Mpox Questions",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-sores-ulcers-rash.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/sti-testing-sores-ulcers-rash.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/sti-testing-sores-ulcers-rash.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2478,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Are stomatocytes ever just artifact?",
      "answer": "Yes. A small number can be caused by smear preparation or drying artifact, so the pathologist and the rest of the smear matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Stomatocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Mouth Cells, Artifact, Liver Disease, Alcohol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2479,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do liver disease and alcohol come up?",
      "answer": "Both can be associated with stomatocytes or other red-cell shape changes, so liver tests and exposure history help interpret the finding.",
      "pageTitle": "Stomatocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Mouth Cells, Artifact, Liver Disease, Alcohol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2480,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a lot of stomatocytes suggest?",
      "answer": "Large numbers are more likely to be meaningful and may prompt review for liver disease, alcohol exposure, medication effects, hemolysis, or a rare inherited membrane disorder.",
      "pageTitle": "Stomatocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Mouth Cells, Artifact, Liver Disease, Alcohol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2481,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests are often checked next?",
      "answer": "CBC indices, reticulocyte count, bilirubin, LDH, haptoglobin, AST, ALT, GGT, and a repeat smear review are common next steps.",
      "pageTitle": "Stomatocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Mouth Cells, Artifact, Liver Disease, Alcohol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2482,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Are stomatocytes the same as target cells?",
      "answer": "No. They are different red-cell shapes, though they can both appear in liver-related patterns or on the same smear.",
      "pageTitle": "Stomatocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Mouth Cells, Artifact, Liver Disease, Alcohol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2483,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I ask for a repeat smear?",
      "answer": "If the smear quality was poor, the finding is unexpected, or the result needs to be matched to ongoing anemia or liver abnormalities.",
      "pageTitle": "Stomatocytes on Blood Smear Interpretation | Mouth Cells, Artifact, Liver Disease, Alcohol, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stomatocytes-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2484,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is PCR always better than culture?",
      "answer": "No. PCR is faster and broader, but culture can still matter for susceptibility testing and public-health follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Culture vs PCR Panel | Infectious Diarrhea Testing and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2485,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can PCR detect dead organisms?",
      "answer": "Yes. PCR detects genetic material, so a positive result does not always mean a live organism is driving symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Culture vs PCR Panel | Infectious Diarrhea Testing and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2486,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why would a lab reflex PCR to culture?",
      "answer": "Some organisms need a live isolate for confirmation, outbreak investigation, or antibiotic susceptibility testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Culture vs PCR Panel | Infectious Diarrhea Testing and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2487,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is stool O&P still useful?",
      "answer": "When parasite exposure, travel, or persistent diarrhea makes parasites more likely, especially if the panel does not cover the question well.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Culture vs PCR Panel | Infectious Diarrhea Testing and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2488,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should every diarrhea case get a broad panel?",
      "answer": "No. Symptom severity, duration, exposure, and dehydration risk should guide how broad the testing needs to be.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Culture vs PCR Panel | Infectious Diarrhea Testing and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2489,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a negative panel rule out all infection?",
      "answer": "No. No panel covers every organism, every toxin, or every timing issue.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Culture vs PCR Panel | Infectious Diarrhea Testing and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2490,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if public health follow-up matters?",
      "answer": "Some positive PCR results need confirmation or isolate recovery so outbreaks and antibiotic decisions can be handled correctly.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Culture vs PCR Panel | Infectious Diarrhea Testing and Result Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-culture-vs-pcr-panel.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2491,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high stool osmotic gap suggest?",
      "answer": "It can fit osmotic diarrhea from unabsorbed solutes such as carbohydrate malabsorption or certain laxatives.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Electrolytes and Osmotic Gap | Chronic Watery Diarrhea Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2492,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a low stool osmotic gap suggest?",
      "answer": "It can fit secretory diarrhea, such as bile acid diarrhea or some infectious, endocrine, or medication-related patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Electrolytes and Osmotic Gap | Chronic Watery Diarrhea Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2493,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can this test diagnose the cause by itself?",
      "answer": "No. It is a clue that needs to be combined with the rest of the diarrhea workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Electrolytes and Osmotic Gap | Chronic Watery Diarrhea Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2494,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does fasting help interpretation?",
      "answer": "Sometimes symptom response to fasting helps the clinician think through osmotic versus secretory patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Electrolytes and Osmotic Gap | Chronic Watery Diarrhea Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2495,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does stool handling matter so much?",
      "answer": "Contamination, storage, and sample quality can change the measured electrolytes and the calculated gap.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Electrolytes and Osmotic Gap | Chronic Watery Diarrhea Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2496,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests often come next?",
      "answer": "Depending on the story, clinicians may consider celiac testing, infection tests, bile acid diarrhea evaluation, calprotectin, or pancreatic elastase.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Electrolytes and Osmotic Gap | Chronic Watery Diarrhea Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-electrolytes-osmotic-gap.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2497,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does an ova and parasite test look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for parasite eggs, cysts, larvae, or whole organisms in stool. It is mainly a microscopy-based stool exam, not a broad gut-health screen.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Ova and Parasite Test | O&P, Travel Diarrhea, Multiple Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2498,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why are multiple samples sometimes requested?",
      "answer": "Parasites may not appear in every stool sample. Collecting more than one sample on different days can improve the chance of finding an intermittent infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Ova and Parasite Test | O&P, Travel Diarrhea, Multiple Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2499,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What kind of symptoms make O&P more likely to help?",
      "answer": "Persistent diarrhea, travel-related diarrhea, blood or mucus in stool, weight loss, immune suppression, or a specific exposure history can make parasite testing more relevant.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Ova and Parasite Test | O&P, Travel Diarrhea, Multiple Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2500,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a negative O&P test still miss a parasite?",
      "answer": "Yes. A negative result does not always rule out parasites, especially if the wrong specimen was collected, too few samples were submitted, or a different test would have been better.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Ova and Parasite Test | O&P, Travel Diarrhea, Multiple Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2501,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I ask if the test is negative but symptoms continue?",
      "answer": "Ask whether Giardia, Cryptosporidium, Cyclospora, stool antigen testing, PCR, repeat O&P, or a noninfectious GI workup makes more sense next.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Ova and Parasite Test | O&P, Travel Diarrhea, Multiple Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2502,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is a different stool test a better fit?",
      "answer": "If the question is about specific parasites, a targeted antigen or PCR test may outperform a broad O&P exam and give a more useful answer.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Ova and Parasite Test | O&P, Travel Diarrhea, Multiple Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2503,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if pinworm seems more likely?",
      "answer": "A tape test or pinworm-specific evaluation is usually a better fit than a stool O&P exam.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Ova and Parasite Test | O&P, Travel Diarrhea, Multiple Samples, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ova-parasite-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2504,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive adenovirus stool test mean?",
      "answer": "It means adenovirus genetic material or antigen was found in the stool sample. The result still needs symptom, age, outbreak, and immune-status context to decide whether it explains the illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Adenovirus Positive Interpretation | Enteric Adenovirus, GI Panels, Co-Detection, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2505,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is whole stool preferred?",
      "answer": "CDC says whole stool is the preferred clinical specimen for laboratory diagnosis of enteric adenovirus, so specimen type and handling can matter for accuracy.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Adenovirus Positive Interpretation | Enteric Adenovirus, GI Panels, Co-Detection, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2506,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out adenovirus?",
      "answer": "Not completely. Timing, sample quality, the exact assay, and whether the panel includes enteric adenovirus targets can all affect interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Adenovirus Positive Interpretation | Enteric Adenovirus, GI Panels, Co-Detection, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2507,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is adenovirus testing useful for every case of diarrhea?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Many gastroenteritis cases are handled clinically unless the illness is severe, prolonged, outbreak-linked, or in a higher-risk person.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Adenovirus Positive Interpretation | Enteric Adenovirus, GI Panels, Co-Detection, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2508,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can a GI panel detect adenovirus?",
      "answer": "Yes, if adenovirus is one of the panel targets. Panel content varies by lab, so the exact adenovirus coverage should be checked on the order or report.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Adenovirus Positive Interpretation | Enteric Adenovirus, GI Panels, Co-Detection, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2509,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can a positive result be old shedding rather than the cause of symptoms?",
      "answer": "Yes, especially in immunocompromised people or when the illness picture does not fit well. The result should be matched to current symptoms and the rest of the stool workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Adenovirus Positive Interpretation | Enteric Adenovirus, GI Panels, Co-Detection, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-adenovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2510,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Aeromonas PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always. It is most meaningful when diarrhea, water exposure, travel, or another exposure fits the pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Aeromonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Water Exposure, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2511,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might culture still matter?",
      "answer": "Culture may help with confirmation, organism characterization, and susceptibility questions when the result is clinically important.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Aeromonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Water Exposure, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2512,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make Aeromonas more likely?",
      "answer": "Freshwater, untreated water, floodwater, seafood, travel, and some wound exposures can be relevant.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Aeromonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Water Exposure, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2513,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can symptoms be mild and still fit Aeromonas?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some cases are self-limited, but severity and duration help decide whether to investigate further.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Aeromonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Water Exposure, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2514,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I get more medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care for blood in stool, fever, dehydration, severe pain, pregnancy, immune suppression, or a worsening course.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Aeromonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Water Exposure, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2515,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Clinicians weigh severity, host risk, and whether the organism is likely to be the real cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Aeromonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Water Exposure, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-aeromonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2516,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does one positive stool PCR mean the antibiotic caused the diarrhea?",
      "answer": "No. Antibiotics can trigger C. diff, but co-detections, colonization, and noninfectious causes still need sorting out.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Antibiotic-Associated Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | C. diff, Toxin Tests, Pathogens, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2517,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do co-detections happen on stool panels?",
      "answer": "Multiplex PCR panels can detect more than one organism, and some targets may not be the main driver of symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Antibiotic-Associated Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | C. diff, Toxin Tests, Pathogens, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2518,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How does toxin testing change the meaning?",
      "answer": "Toxin testing helps separate possible active CDI from a gene-only signal that may reflect colonization.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Antibiotic-Associated Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | C. diff, Toxin Tests, Pathogens, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2519,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can C. diff be colonization?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC notes colonized patients can test positive without having disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Antibiotic-Associated Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | C. diff, Toxin Tests, Pathogens, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2520,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if laxatives or stool softeners were used?",
      "answer": "Those can explain diarrhea and make a positive PCR less specific for infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Antibiotic-Associated Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | C. diff, Toxin Tests, Pathogens, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2521,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get urgent care?",
      "answer": "Severe pain, dehydration, fever, confusion, kidney injury, or blood in stool warrant prompt clinical review.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Antibiotic-Associated Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | C. diff, Toxin Tests, Pathogens, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-antibiotic-associated-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2522,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive astrovirus stool PCR mean?",
      "answer": "It means astrovirus genetic material was detected in the stool sample. The result still needs symptom and outbreak context before it is treated as the whole explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Astrovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Children, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2523,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can astrovirus be found on broad GI panels?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some multiplex panels include astrovirus among viral diarrhea targets, but panel content varies by lab.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Astrovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Children, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2524,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does age matter for interpretation?",
      "answer": "Yes. Children, older adults, and immunocompromised people can have different risk and follow-up considerations than healthy adults.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Astrovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Children, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2525,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can a positive test be old shedding?",
      "answer": "It can. PCR detects genetic material, so the timing relative to symptoms matters a lot.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Astrovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Children, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2526,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if another organism was detected too?",
      "answer": "Then co-detection has to be sorted by which target best fits the symptom timing, severity, and exposure story.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Astrovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Children, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2527,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether this result changes hydration guidance, isolation, outbreak steps, or whether another diagnosis still needs to be checked.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Astrovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, GI Panels, Outbreaks, Children, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-astrovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2528,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does C. difficile co-detection on a stool PCR panel mean?",
      "answer": "It means C. difficile was detected alongside one or more other stool targets, but not every detected target is necessarily the main cause of symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Co-Detection Interpretation | NAAT, Toxin Testing, Colonization, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2529,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does NAAT positive but toxin negative always mean infection?",
      "answer": "No. CDC and IDSA emphasize that NAAT can detect toxigenic C. difficile even when toxin or compatible diarrhea is absent, so colonization is possible.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Co-Detection Interpretation | NAAT, Toxin Testing, Colonization, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2530,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When should a positive C. diff PCR be taken more seriously?",
      "answer": "It becomes more concerning when new diarrhea, recent antibiotics, hospitalization, abdominal pain, fever, leukocytosis, or kidney injury fit the story.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Co-Detection Interpretation | NAAT, Toxin Testing, Colonization, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2531,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can another pathogen explain the illness better?",
      "answer": "Yes. Co-detection is common on broad stool panels, and the organism that best fits timing, severity, and exposure usually drives interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Co-Detection Interpretation | NAAT, Toxin Testing, Colonization, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2532,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should repeat testing be used as a test of cure?",
      "answer": "Usually not. PCR can stay positive after symptoms improve, so repeating the same test often does not answer the real clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Co-Detection Interpretation | NAAT, Toxin Testing, Colonization, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2533,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the stool was unformed, whether toxin testing was done, which organism best explains the illness, and whether another test or treatment decision is actually needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Co-Detection Interpretation | NAAT, Toxin Testing, Colonization, Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2534,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Should I repeat a C. difficile test after treatment?",
      "answer": "Usually not just to prove cure. Repeat testing is most useful when symptoms return or the clinical picture changes.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Repeat Testing Questions | When Retesting Helps, When It Does Not",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2535,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can PCR stay positive after symptoms improve?",
      "answer": "NAAT or PCR can detect toxigenic C. difficile material even after the person no longer has active diarrhea.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Repeat Testing Questions | When Retesting Helps, When It Does Not",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2536,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What if I still have diarrhea after treatment?",
      "answer": "That can justify reassessment, but the next step is to look at stool consistency, severity, medications, and other causes before repeating the same test reflexively.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Repeat Testing Questions | When Retesting Helps, When It Does Not",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2537,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When does a repeat test help?",
      "answer": "When new unexplained watery diarrhea returns, when recurrence is suspected, or when the first result was obtained in the wrong clinical setting.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Repeat Testing Questions | When Retesting Helps, When It Does Not",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2538,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is a toxin negative result always reassuring?",
      "answer": "No. Toxin negative with NAAT positive can still be confusing and needs symptom fit and algorithm context.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Repeat Testing Questions | When Retesting Helps, When It Does Not",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2539,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What symptoms make retesting more urgent?",
      "answer": "Severe pain, dehydration, fever, kidney injury, confusion, or very high white blood cell count warrant prompt clinical review rather than waiting on a routine repeat test.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Repeat Testing Questions | When Retesting Helps, When It Does Not",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2540,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "How do clinicians avoid overtesting?",
      "answer": "By only repeating stool testing when the stool pattern or severity changes enough to raise a new clinical question.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Repeat Testing Questions | When Retesting Helps, When It Does Not",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-repeat-testing-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2541,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does toxin gene positive mean?",
      "answer": "It means toxigenic C. difficile genetic material was detected, but the result still needs symptom and stool-context interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Toxin Gene Positive Interpretation | NAAT, Colonization, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2542,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does this always mean infection?",
      "answer": "No. The pattern can reflect colonization, low-level or early infection, or diarrhea from another cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Toxin Gene Positive Interpretation | NAAT, Colonization, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2543,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can formed stool cause confusion?",
      "answer": "Yes. Testing formed stool can make colonization look like a disease result.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Toxin Gene Positive Interpretation | NAAT, Colonization, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2544,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is the result more concerning?",
      "answer": "It matters more when new watery diarrhea, recent antibiotics, abdominal pain, fever, leukocytosis, or kidney injury fit the story.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Toxin Gene Positive Interpretation | NAAT, Colonization, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2545,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should clinicians rely on PCR alone?",
      "answer": "No. CDC and IDSA/SHEA recommend interpreting NAAT with symptoms and the testing algorithm, not in isolation.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Toxin Gene Positive Interpretation | NAAT, Colonization, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2546,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What symptoms need prompt review?",
      "answer": "Severe pain, dehydration, fever, kidney injury, confusion, or a very high white blood cell count should prompt clinical review.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR C. difficile Toxin Gene Positive Interpretation | NAAT, Colonization, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-gene-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2547,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does toxin negative but NAAT positive mean?",
      "answer": "It means toxigenic C. difficile genetic material was detected, but toxin was not found in the stool sample.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Toxin Negative but NAAT Positive | What the Pattern Means",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2548,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does this always mean infection?",
      "answer": "No. The pattern can reflect colonization, toxin below detection, early or low-level infection, or diarrhea from another cause.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Toxin Negative but NAAT Positive | What the Pattern Means",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2549,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is the result more likely to matter?",
      "answer": "It matters more when the person has new unexplained watery diarrhea, recent antibiotic exposure, or other CDI risk factors.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Toxin Negative but NAAT Positive | What the Pattern Means",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2550,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can formed stool cause confusion?",
      "answer": "Yes. Testing formed stool can make colonization look like a positive disease result.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Toxin Negative but NAAT Positive | What the Pattern Means",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2551,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should clinicians rely on PCR alone?",
      "answer": "No. CDC and IDSA/SHEA recommend interpreting NAAT with symptoms and the testing algorithm, not in isolation.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Toxin Negative but NAAT Positive | What the Pattern Means",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2552,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What symptoms need prompt review?",
      "answer": "Severe pain, dehydration, fever, kidney injury, confusion, or very high white blood cell count should prompt clinical review.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Toxin Negative but NAAT Positive | What the Pattern Means",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2553,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "Can a toxin-negative result still need treatment?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, yes. Treatment decisions depend on symptoms, stool consistency, risk factors, and the full testing algorithm rather than PCR alone.",
      "pageTitle": "C. difficile Toxin Negative but NAAT Positive | What the Pattern Means",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-c-difficile-toxin-negative-naat-positive.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2554,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Campylobacter PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always. It is strongest when the symptoms and exposure timing fit Campylobacter gastroenteritis.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Campylobacter Positive Interpretation | Diarrhea, CIDT, Reflex Culture, Antibiotic Susceptibility, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2555,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might culture still be ordered?",
      "answer": "Culture can provide an isolate for susceptibility testing and public-health work when needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Campylobacter Positive Interpretation | Diarrhea, CIDT, Reflex Culture, Antibiotic Susceptibility, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2556,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make Campylobacter more likely?",
      "answer": "Undercooked poultry, raw milk, contaminated water, animal exposure, travel, and outbreak context all raise suspicion.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Campylobacter Positive Interpretation | Diarrhea, CIDT, Reflex Culture, Antibiotic Susceptibility, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2557,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can symptoms improve before the stool result is reviewed?",
      "answer": "Yes. The result can still matter, especially if diarrhea was recent or severe.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Campylobacter Positive Interpretation | Diarrhea, CIDT, Reflex Culture, Antibiotic Susceptibility, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2558,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I get more medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care promptly for dehydration, blood in stool, high fever, severe pain, or high-risk conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Campylobacter Positive Interpretation | Diarrhea, CIDT, Reflex Culture, Antibiotic Susceptibility, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2559,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Treatment depends on severity, risk factors, and clinician judgment.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Campylobacter Positive Interpretation | Diarrhea, CIDT, Reflex Culture, Antibiotic Susceptibility, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-campylobacter-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2560,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does co-detection on a GI PCR panel mean?",
      "answer": "It means more than one organism was detected in the same stool sample, but not every detected target is necessarily causing symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Co-Detection Interpretation | Multiple Pathogens, GI Panels, Colonization, Severity, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2561,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one panel show both infection and colonization?",
      "answer": "Yes. A co-detection can reflect true coinfection, colonization, shedding, or a target that is less clinically important than the main pathogen.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Co-Detection Interpretation | Multiple Pathogens, GI Panels, Colonization, Severity, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2562,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Which organism should drive treatment?",
      "answer": "The organism that best fits the symptoms, exposure history, severity, and public-health context usually gets the most weight.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Co-Detection Interpretation | Multiple Pathogens, GI Panels, Colonization, Severity, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2563,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should the workup broaden?",
      "answer": "Broaden when symptoms persist, the patient is immunocompromised, there is blood or severe illness, or the panel does not fit the clinical picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Co-Detection Interpretation | Multiple Pathogens, GI Panels, Colonization, Severity, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2564,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why might culture still matter?",
      "answer": "Some bacteria need culture or public-health follow-up even after a PCR result, especially if reporting or susceptibility questions remain.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Co-Detection Interpretation | Multiple Pathogens, GI Panels, Colonization, Severity, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2565,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask which detected organism best fits the illness, whether public-health reporting is needed, and whether another test would answer the question better.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Co-Detection Interpretation | Multiple Pathogens, GI Panels, Colonization, Severity, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-co-detection-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2566,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Cryptosporidium PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always, but it is meaningful when the diarrhea and exposure fit cryptosporidiosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cryptosporidium Positive Interpretation | Crypto, Water Exposure, Immune Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2567,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does immune status matter so much?",
      "answer": "Crypto can be prolonged or severe in people with weakened immune systems, including HIV, transplant, cancer therapy, or inherited immune problems.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cryptosporidium Positive Interpretation | Crypto, Water Exposure, Immune Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2568,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make Crypto more likely?",
      "answer": "Pools, splash pads, lakes, untreated water, child care, animal exposure, and travel can all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cryptosporidium Positive Interpretation | Crypto, Water Exposure, Immune Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2569,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can Crypto cause symptoms for weeks?",
      "answer": "Yes. Watery diarrhea and other symptoms can last days to weeks, especially in higher-risk settings.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cryptosporidium Positive Interpretation | Crypto, Water Exposure, Immune Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2570,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I avoid swimming after Crypto?",
      "answer": "Yes. Swimming spread is a real concern, and prevention guidance matters after symptoms improve too.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cryptosporidium Positive Interpretation | Crypto, Water Exposure, Immune Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2571,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need treatment?",
      "answer": "Treatment depends on the person, the symptoms, and the immune-risk context; hydration and follow-up are always important.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cryptosporidium Positive Interpretation | Crypto, Water Exposure, Immune Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cryptosporidium-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2572,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Cyclospora PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always, but it is very meaningful when prolonged watery diarrhea and exposure history fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cyclospora Positive Interpretation | Cyclosporiasis, Produce Exposure, Relapsing Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2573,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is Cyclospora often missed on routine testing?",
      "answer": "It is not included in every panel or routine O&P request, so a specific request or PCR may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cyclospora Positive Interpretation | Cyclosporiasis, Produce Exposure, Relapsing Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2574,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make Cyclospora more likely?",
      "answer": "Fresh produce, travel, outbreak exposure, and contaminated food or water are classic clues.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cyclospora Positive Interpretation | Cyclosporiasis, Produce Exposure, Relapsing Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2575,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can symptoms come and go?",
      "answer": "Yes. Relapsing or prolonged watery diarrhea is a common pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cyclospora Positive Interpretation | Cyclosporiasis, Produce Exposure, Relapsing Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2576,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does public health matter here?",
      "answer": "Cyclospora is often linked to foodborne outbreaks, so confirmed cases can need reporting and tracing.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cyclospora Positive Interpretation | Cyclosporiasis, Produce Exposure, Relapsing Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2577,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need treatment?",
      "answer": "Treatment depends on symptoms and clinician judgment, but prolonged illness usually deserves follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Cyclospora Positive Interpretation | Cyclosporiasis, Produce Exposure, Relapsing Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-cyclospora-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2578,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does one positive stool PCR mean the antibiotic caused the diarrhea?",
      "answer": "No. Antibiotics can trigger C. diff, but co-detections, colonization, and noninfectious causes still need sorting out.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Co-Detection Questions | EPEC, EAEC, ETEC, Shigella, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2579,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do co-detections happen on stool panels?",
      "answer": "Multiplex PCR panels can detect more than one organism, and some targets may not be the main driver of symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Co-Detection Questions | EPEC, EAEC, ETEC, Shigella, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2580,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How does toxin testing change the meaning?",
      "answer": "Toxin testing helps separate possible active CDI from a gene-only signal that may reflect colonization.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Co-Detection Questions | EPEC, EAEC, ETEC, Shigella, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2581,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can C. diff be colonization?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC notes colonized patients can test positive without having disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Co-Detection Questions | EPEC, EAEC, ETEC, Shigella, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2582,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if laxatives or stool softeners were used?",
      "answer": "Those can explain diarrhea and make a positive PCR less specific for infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Co-Detection Questions | EPEC, EAEC, ETEC, Shigella, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2583,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get urgent care?",
      "answer": "Severe pain, dehydration, fever, confusion, kidney injury, or blood in stool warrant prompt clinical review.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Co-Detection Questions | EPEC, EAEC, ETEC, Shigella, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2584,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What do E. coli pathotypes on stool PCR mean?",
      "answer": "They are gene-pattern labels on a PCR panel, not a full diagnosis by themselves.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Pathotype Interpretation | ETEC, EPEC, EAEC, STEC, EIEC, Travel Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2585,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which E. coli pathotypes are usually most concerning?",
      "answer": "STEC is the one that most often changes management because of Shiga toxin and hemolytic uremic syndrome risk.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Pathotype Interpretation | ETEC, EPEC, EAEC, STEC, EIEC, Travel Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2586,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can ETEC, EPEC, or EAEC be colonization?",
      "answer": "Yes. These can fit diarrhea in the right setting, but they can also be less specific than the report wording makes them sound.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Pathotype Interpretation | ETEC, EPEC, EAEC, STEC, EIEC, Travel Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2587,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does travel history matter?",
      "answer": "Travel can make diarrheagenic E. coli more likely and helps match the result to the symptom story.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Pathotype Interpretation | ETEC, EPEC, EAEC, STEC, EIEC, Travel Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2588,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should not happen with a STEC result?",
      "answer": "Antibiotics and antimotility medicines should not be started without clinician guidance because they can be harmful in some STEC cases.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Pathotype Interpretation | ETEC, EPEC, EAEC, STEC, EIEC, Travel Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2589,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask which E. coli pathotype was detected, whether Shiga toxin was included, and whether public-health follow-up or culture is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR E. coli Pathotype Interpretation | ETEC, EPEC, EAEC, STEC, EIEC, Travel Diarrhea, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-e-coli-pathotype-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2590,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Entamoeba histolytica PCR always mean active disease?",
      "answer": "Not always, but it is much more specific than a microscopy report that only says Entamoeba species.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Entamoeba Histolytica Positive Interpretation | Amebiasis, Travel, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2591,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does species specificity matter?",
      "answer": "Because E. histolytica can cause invasive intestinal disease and liver abscess, while look-alike species may not.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Entamoeba Histolytica Positive Interpretation | Amebiasis, Travel, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2592,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make amebiasis more likely?",
      "answer": "Travel, contaminated food or water, and some sexual exposures can matter, especially in endemic settings.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Entamoeba Histolytica Positive Interpretation | Amebiasis, Travel, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2593,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should liver abscess be considered?",
      "answer": "Right upper abdominal pain, fever, or a very ill appearance can raise that concern, especially after travel exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Entamoeba Histolytica Positive Interpretation | Amebiasis, Travel, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2594,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can this result explain dysentery?",
      "answer": "Yes. Bloody diarrhea or severe colitis can fit invasive amebiasis and usually warrants clinician follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Entamoeba Histolytica Positive Interpretation | Amebiasis, Travel, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2595,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need treatment?",
      "answer": "Treatment depends on symptoms, disease location, and clinician judgment, often followed by a luminal agent after tissue treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Entamoeba Histolytica Positive Interpretation | Amebiasis, Travel, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-entamoeba-histolytica-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2596,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does EAEC mean on stool PCR?",
      "answer": "It points to a diarrheagenic E. coli pathotype that can fit persistent or traveler-associated diarrhea.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroaggregative E. coli Positive Interpretation | EAEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2597,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can EAEC be colonization?",
      "answer": "Yes. A detected pathotype may be less specific than it sounds, especially when another pathogen is also present.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroaggregative E. coli Positive Interpretation | EAEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2598,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does diarrhea duration matter?",
      "answer": "Persistent watery diarrhea makes EAEC more plausible than a short, self-limited illness does.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroaggregative E. coli Positive Interpretation | EAEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2599,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if another pathogen is also found?",
      "answer": "The other result may explain the illness better, so co-detection really matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroaggregative E. coli Positive Interpretation | EAEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2600,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I treat the PCR result by itself?",
      "answer": "No. The result should be interpreted with symptoms, exposure history, and the rest of the panel.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroaggregative E. coli Positive Interpretation | EAEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2601,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether EAEC best fits the illness, whether another cause is more likely, and whether any follow-up is actually needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroaggregative E. coli Positive Interpretation | EAEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroaggregative-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2602,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why are EIEC and Shigella often grouped?",
      "answer": "Because the molecular targets can overlap, so some panels report them together.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroinvasive E. coli/Shigella Positive Interpretation | EIEC, Shigella, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2603,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive result always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "No. Symptoms, stool consistency, and exposure context still decide how meaningful the result is.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroinvasive E. coli/Shigella Positive Interpretation | EIEC, Shigella, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2604,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is culture important?",
      "answer": "Culture may matter for susceptibility testing, confirmation, or public-health reasons.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroinvasive E. coli/Shigella Positive Interpretation | EIEC, Shigella, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2605,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can this matter for work or childcare?",
      "answer": "Yes. Shigella can have transmission implications that affect return-to-work or return-to-care guidance.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroinvasive E. coli/Shigella Positive Interpretation | EIEC, Shigella, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2606,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if another pathogen was also detected?",
      "answer": "The other organism may explain the illness better, so the full panel matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroinvasive E. coli/Shigella Positive Interpretation | EIEC, Shigella, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2607,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether culture is needed, whether the panel really separated EIEC from Shigella, and what follow-up is expected.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteroinvasive E. coli/Shigella Positive Interpretation | EIEC, Shigella, Dysentery, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteroinvasive-e-coli-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2608,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does EPEC mean on stool PCR?",
      "answer": "It is a pathotype label that can fit diarrhea, but it is not a full diagnosis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteropathogenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | EPEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2609,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is EPEC more important in children or adults?",
      "answer": "It often gets more attention in symptomatic children, but adults can still have clinically relevant detections.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteropathogenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | EPEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2610,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can EPEC be colonization?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some positives are incidental or less specific than the label suggests, especially with broad panels.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteropathogenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | EPEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2611,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is EPEC more likely to matter?",
      "answer": "It matters more when watery diarrhea, daycare exposure, travel, or persistent symptoms fit the story.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteropathogenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | EPEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2612,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why do co-detections matter?",
      "answer": "Because another detected pathogen may explain the illness better than EPEC does.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteropathogenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | EPEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2613,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether another pathogen fits better, whether the stool was actually diarrheal, and whether any follow-up is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enteropathogenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | EPEC, Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enteropathogenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2614,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does ETEC mean on stool PCR?",
      "answer": "It points to an E. coli pathotype linked to watery diarrhea, especially traveler's diarrhea, but it still needs symptom fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enterotoxigenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | ETEC, Travel Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2615,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does ETEC always require treatment?",
      "answer": "No. The right next step depends on severity, hydration status, duration, and whether another pathogen fits better.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enterotoxigenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | ETEC, Travel Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2616,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can ETEC be colonization?",
      "answer": "Sometimes a detected pathotype is less specific than the report wording makes it sound, especially on broad multiplex panels.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enterotoxigenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | ETEC, Travel Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2617,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does travel history matter?",
      "answer": "Travel and exposure history help tell a meaningful ETEC detection from a less actionable incidental one.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enterotoxigenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | ETEC, Travel Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2618,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the diarrhea is bloody?",
      "answer": "Bloody diarrhea should prompt a broader differential because ETEC is usually associated with watery diarrhea.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enterotoxigenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | ETEC, Travel Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2619,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask which target was detected, whether another pathogen was found, and whether hydration or further evaluation is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Enterotoxigenic E. coli Positive Interpretation | ETEC, Travel Diarrhea, Co-Detections, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-enterotoxigenic-e-coli-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2620,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Giardia PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Usually yes when the symptoms and exposure fit, but the clinical picture still matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Giardia Positive Interpretation | Giardiasis, Water Exposure, Retesting, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2621,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might retesting be recommended?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends retesting only if symptoms continue after treatment is complete.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Giardia Positive Interpretation | Giardiasis, Water Exposure, Retesting, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2622,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can Giardia be picked up from water or daycare?",
      "answer": "Yes. Untreated water, childcare settings, and household spread are classic exposures.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Giardia Positive Interpretation | Giardiasis, Water Exposure, Retesting, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2623,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What if another pathogen was also detected?",
      "answer": "Co-detections can happen on multiplex panels, so the organism that best fits the symptoms should guide interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Giardia Positive Interpretation | Giardiasis, Water Exposure, Retesting, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2624,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I get more medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care for dehydration, blood in stool, high fever, severe pain, or immune compromise.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Giardia Positive Interpretation | Giardiasis, Water Exposure, Retesting, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2625,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if symptoms persist after treatment?",
      "answer": "Persistent symptoms may reflect reinfection, lactose intolerance, or another diagnosis and deserve follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Giardia Positive Interpretation | Giardiasis, Water Exposure, Retesting, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-giardia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2626,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a negative stool PCR panel mean?",
      "answer": "It means the tested targets were not detected in that specimen, not that every infection or noninfectious cause has been ruled out.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Negative With Persistent Diarrhea | GI Panel Limits, Noninfectious Causes, Repeat Testing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2627,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can diarrhea persist after a negative panel?",
      "answer": "Because the causative organism may not be on the panel, the sample may have been collected at the wrong time, or the cause may be noninfectious.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Negative With Persistent Diarrhea | GI Panel Limits, Noninfectious Causes, Repeat Testing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2628,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When should the workup broaden?",
      "answer": "Broaden when symptoms persist, there are red flags, the person is immunocompromised, or travel and parasite exposure make a different test more appropriate.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Negative With Persistent Diarrhea | GI Panel Limits, Noninfectious Causes, Repeat Testing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2629,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a repeat panel always help?",
      "answer": "Not always. Sometimes a different test type is more useful than repeating the same panel.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Negative With Persistent Diarrhea | GI Panel Limits, Noninfectious Causes, Repeat Testing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2630,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What noninfectious causes should be considered?",
      "answer": "Celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, bile acid diarrhea, medication effects, and malabsorption can all be part of the differential.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Negative With Persistent Diarrhea | GI Panel Limits, Noninfectious Causes, Repeat Testing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2631,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask what organisms the panel covered, whether a parasite test or inflammatory workup is needed, and whether the next step should be a different test rather than repeating the same one.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Negative With Persistent Diarrhea | GI Panel Limits, Noninfectious Causes, Repeat Testing, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-negative-with-persistent-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2632,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive norovirus stool PCR mean?",
      "answer": "It means norovirus RNA was detected in the stool sample, which is most meaningful when vomiting, watery diarrhea, and exposure timing fit the illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Norovirus Positive Interpretation | Shedding, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2633,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a positive result linger after recovery?",
      "answer": "Yes. PCR can remain positive during shedding after symptoms improve, so a positive result after recovery does not always mean active illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Norovirus Positive Interpretation | Shedding, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2634,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is norovirus testing actually useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful when it changes outbreak control, infection-control actions, public-health reporting, or the search for another cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Norovirus Positive Interpretation | Shedding, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2635,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a GI panel result need special interpretation?",
      "answer": "Yes. A panel result still needs symptom timing, dehydration risk, immune status, and co-detection context before it is treated as the main explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Norovirus Positive Interpretation | Shedding, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2636,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should antigen testing replace PCR?",
      "answer": "No. CDC describes RT-qPCR as the most important method for many settings, while antigen tests are more limited and depend on the use case.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Norovirus Positive Interpretation | Shedding, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2637,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the result changes isolation, hydration, return-to-work, or outbreak reporting, and whether another pathogen or noninfectious cause better fits the story.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Norovirus Positive Interpretation | Shedding, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Symptoms, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-norovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2638,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What can a negative stool PCR parasite panel still miss?",
      "answer": "It can miss parasites that are not on the panel, infections with intermittent shedding, and situations where a different test such as O&P microscopy, antigen testing, or serology would answer the question better.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Parasite Panel False Negative Questions | Why a Negative Can Still Miss Parasites",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2639,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might a clinician order an O&P after a negative PCR panel?",
      "answer": "Because O&P can sometimes detect eggs, cysts, larvae, or segments that the PCR panel does not include, and CDC notes that multiple stool samples may be needed in parasitic disease workups.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Parasite Panel False Negative Questions | Why a Negative Can Still Miss Parasites",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2640,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How many stool samples are usually helpful?",
      "answer": "CDC says three or more stool samples collected on separate days are often used for fecal examinations in parasitic disease workups, though the exact plan depends on the parasite question.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Parasite Panel False Negative Questions | Why a Negative Can Still Miss Parasites",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2641,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative panel rule out travel parasites?",
      "answer": "No. Travel history can point toward parasites that are not covered on a given panel or that need a different specimen type or test method.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Parasite Panel False Negative Questions | Why a Negative Can Still Miss Parasites",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2642,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I ask about a different test instead of repeating the same one?",
      "answer": "Ask when symptoms or exposure history still fit a parasite infection but the panel was negative, especially if the suspected organism may need microscopy, antigen testing, or serology rather than the same PCR menu.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Parasite Panel False Negative Questions | Why a Negative Can Still Miss Parasites",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2643,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should symptoms make follow-up more urgent?",
      "answer": "Prompt care matters more with dehydration, blood in stool, severe abdominal pain, persistent fever, pregnancy, or immune suppression.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Parasite Panel False Negative Questions | Why a Negative Can Still Miss Parasites",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-parasite-panel-false-negative-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2644,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Plesiomonas PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always. It is most meaningful when the diarrhea, travel, or water exposure history fits.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Plesiomonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Travel, Water Exposure, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2645,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why can this organism be tricky on a panel?",
      "answer": "Plesiomonas may be present in low-resource or travel settings, and PCR results should still be linked to symptoms and co-detections.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Plesiomonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Travel, Water Exposure, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2646,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make Plesiomonas more likely?",
      "answer": "Travel, untreated water, freshwater, seafood, and animal exposure can all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Plesiomonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Travel, Water Exposure, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2647,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can symptoms go away before the result is reviewed?",
      "answer": "Yes. A resolved illness can still be useful context, but treatment and follow-up depend on the full picture.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Plesiomonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Travel, Water Exposure, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2648,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I get more medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care for dehydration, blood in stool, fever, severe pain, pregnancy, older age, or immune suppression.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Plesiomonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Travel, Water Exposure, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2649,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. The decision depends on severity, duration, host risk, and whether culture information would change care.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Plesiomonas Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Travel, Water Exposure, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-plesiomonas-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2650,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive stool PCR after symptoms resolve mean I am still sick?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. PCR detects genetic material, so a positive result after you feel better can reflect shedding, colonization, or a recently treated infection rather than active disease. The organism, the timing, and whether symptoms fit matter more than the number by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Positive After Symptoms Resolve | Shedding, Colonization, Test-of-Cure Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2651,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Should I repeat a stool PCR as a test of cure?",
      "answer": "Often no. Many stool PCR tests are not designed for routine test-of-cure use, because they can stay positive after symptoms improve. Repeat testing is more useful only when the result would change a real decision or when a specific organism has special clearance rules.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Positive After Symptoms Resolve | Shedding, Colonization, Test-of-Cure Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2652,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why can stool PCR stay positive after recovery?",
      "answer": "Some organisms are shed for a while after symptoms improve. PCR can also detect colonization or residual nucleic acid from a recently cleared infection. That is why a positive PCR alone does not always prove ongoing illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Positive After Symptoms Resolve | Shedding, Colonization, Test-of-Cure Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2653,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "How is C. diff different from other stool PCR results?",
      "answer": "C. diff interpretation depends heavily on diarrhea criteria and toxin context. A positive NAAT or PCR without compatible diarrhea can reflect colonization, so toxin testing and the clinical picture matter more than the PCR result alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Positive After Symptoms Resolve | Shedding, Colonization, Test-of-Cure Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2654,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is culture or toxin testing more helpful than PCR?",
      "answer": "Culture or toxin testing can help when public-health follow-up, susceptibility testing, or toxin confirmation would change management. That is especially relevant for C. diff, some bacterial pathogens, and situations where a broad PCR panel gives too much information without enough context.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Positive After Symptoms Resolve | Shedding, Colonization, Test-of-Cure Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2655,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if I feel well but the PCR is still positive?",
      "answer": "If you feel well, the key question is whether follow-up would change anything. In many cases, a well-appearing person with resolved diarrhea does not need a repeat PCR unless the organism, the setting, or the exposure history makes a specific follow-up plan important.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Positive After Symptoms Resolve | Shedding, Colonization, Test-of-Cure Limits, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-positive-after-symptoms-resolve.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2656,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is post-infectious IBS?",
      "answer": "It is IBS symptoms that begin after an infection, often after a diarrheal illness.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Post-Infectious IBS Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Negative Panels, Red Flags, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2657,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can stool PCR diagnose IBS?",
      "answer": "No. Stool PCR looks for infection, not the functional bowel pattern of IBS.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Post-Infectious IBS Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Negative Panels, Red Flags, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2658,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a negative panel mean?",
      "answer": "It lowers the chance of a tested pathogen but does not rule out every noninfectious cause.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Post-Infectious IBS Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Negative Panels, Red Flags, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2659,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should celiac or IBD be tested?",
      "answer": "When symptoms persist, worsen, or include red flags such as blood, weight loss, fever, or nocturnal symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Post-Infectious IBS Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Negative Panels, Red Flags, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2660,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can symptoms last months?",
      "answer": "Yes. Post-infectious bowel symptoms can linger long after the original infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Post-Infectious IBS Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Negative Panels, Red Flags, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2661,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Which red flags need prompt review?",
      "answer": "Blood, fever, weight loss, anemia, dehydration, severe pain, or nighttime symptoms should prompt prompt review.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Post-Infectious IBS Questions | Persistent Diarrhea, Negative Panels, Red Flags, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-post-infectious-ibs-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2662,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main use of rotavirus stool testing?",
      "answer": "Rotavirus stool testing is most useful when a diagnosis changes care, outbreak response, infection-control steps, or public-health reporting. Many individual cases are still diagnosed clinically.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Rotavirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Vaccination, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2663,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Which test method is most helpful?",
      "answer": "CDC says rotavirus can be detected by antigen-detection immunoassays or nucleic acid detection PCR assays on stool specimens, and RT-PCR or qRT-PCR is often the more flexible choice when molecular testing is available.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Rotavirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Vaccination, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2664,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does whole stool matter?",
      "answer": "Whole stool is the practical specimen for stool-based diagnosis and outbreak work. Timing, refrigeration, and whether the specimen was collected soon after onset all affect the quality of the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Rotavirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Vaccination, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2665,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does vaccination make testing useless?",
      "answer": "No. CDC says vaccination has greatly reduced disease burden, but cases and outbreaks still occur. Vaccination status is part of interpretation, not a reason to ignore a positive test.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Rotavirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Vaccination, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2666,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is a GI panel better than a single rotavirus test?",
      "answer": "A GI panel can help when several pathogens are plausible or when the clinical picture is not specific. It does not replace context, because a positive result still has to be matched to symptoms, age, and severity.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Rotavirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Vaccination, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2667,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should rotavirus outbreaks be reported?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends surveillance and reporting for rotavirus activity and says outbreak or cluster situations should be handled with public-health awareness, especially in childcare, school, or facility settings.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Rotavirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Vaccination, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-rotavirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2668,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Salmonella PCR always mean I need antibiotics?",
      "answer": "No. Many cases are managed with supportive care only; antibiotics depend on severity and risk factors.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Salmonella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, Susceptibility, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2669,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does follow-up culture matter?",
      "answer": "It can provide an isolate for susceptibility testing and outbreak tracking.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Salmonella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, Susceptibility, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2670,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can Salmonella still be found after symptoms improve?",
      "answer": "Yes. Stool shedding can persist after the acute illness starts to settle.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Salmonella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, Susceptibility, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2671,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What exposures make Salmonella more likely?",
      "answer": "Contaminated food or water, poultry, eggs, beef, produce, reptiles, and animal exposure all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Salmonella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, Susceptibility, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2672,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I get more medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care for dehydration, bloody stools, high fever, severe pain, or high-risk conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Salmonella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, Susceptibility, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2673,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if the result was from a multiplex PCR panel?",
      "answer": "Interpret it with the rest of the clinical picture, and ask whether the lab recommends reflex culture.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Salmonella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, Susceptibility, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-salmonella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2674,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a positive sapovirus stool PCR mean?",
      "answer": "It means sapovirus RNA was detected in the stool sample, but the clinical meaning depends on timing, symptoms, and whether another pathogen also fits better.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Sapovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2675,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can sapovirus be part of an outbreak?",
      "answer": "Yes. Sapovirus is a recognized cause of viral gastroenteritis outbreaks, especially in close-contact settings such as long-term care, childcare, and food service clusters.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Sapovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2676,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a positive result after recovery mean ongoing illness?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. PCR can remain positive after the peak of illness, so follow-up should focus on symptoms and exposure context.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Sapovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2677,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should sapovirus be treated like norovirus?",
      "answer": "The broad clinical approach is similar: supportive care, hydration, and outbreak awareness. The exact result still needs the syndrome and panel context.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Sapovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2678,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if the panel found sapovirus plus another organism?",
      "answer": "Then the question is which result best explains the case. Co-detection does not mean every organism needs separate treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Sapovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2679,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the clinician?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the result changes isolation, hydration, outbreak reporting, or whether another test or cause should be considered instead.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Sapovirus Positive Interpretation | Viral Gastroenteritis, Outbreaks, GI Panels, Shedding, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-sapovirus-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2680,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why does Shigella PCR often need culture confirmation?",
      "answer": "Culture can help confirm the diagnosis and provide an isolate for resistance testing and public-health work.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Shigella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, EIEC, Antibiotic Resistance, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2681,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does Shigella/EIEC mean?",
      "answer": "It means the molecular target may not distinguish Shigella from enteroinvasive E. coli, so context matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Shigella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, EIEC, Antibiotic Resistance, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2682,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Do antibiotics always help?",
      "answer": "Not always, but they may be considered in some cases; resistance patterns and clinician guidance matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Shigella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, EIEC, Antibiotic Resistance, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2683,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can someone spread Shigella without severe symptoms?",
      "answer": "Yes. Even mild illness can spread infection, especially in high-contact settings.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Shigella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, EIEC, Antibiotic Resistance, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2684,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should I get more medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek care for dehydration, blood in stool, high fever, severe pain, or immunocompromise.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Shigella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, EIEC, Antibiotic Resistance, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2685,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Do work or childcare rules matter?",
      "answer": "Yes. Local public-health guidance can affect return-to-work, school, childcare, or food handling.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Shigella Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Reflex Culture, EIEC, Antibiotic Resistance, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-shigella-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2686,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is STEC treated as high-stakes?",
      "answer": "Because some infections can progress to hemolytic uremic syndrome, which affects the kidneys and blood counts.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR STEC Positive Interpretation | Shiga Toxin, E. coli O157, HUS Risk, Culture, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2687,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why avoid antibiotics or anti-diarrheals without guidance?",
      "answer": "In some STEC situations they can worsen outcomes or complicate management, so clinician advice matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR STEC Positive Interpretation | Shiga Toxin, E. coli O157, HUS Risk, Culture, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2688,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the difference between Shiga toxin and O157?",
      "answer": "Shiga toxin is the harmful factor; O157 is one strain that can produce it, but non-O157 STEC also matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR STEC Positive Interpretation | Shiga Toxin, E. coli O157, HUS Risk, Culture, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2689,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What follow-up labs matter if symptoms are severe?",
      "answer": "CBC, platelets, creatinine, and urine output are common follow-up pieces when HUS is a concern.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR STEC Positive Interpretation | Shiga Toxin, E. coli O157, HUS Risk, Culture, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2690,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can STEC be found without bloody diarrhea?",
      "answer": "Yes. Blood is a red flag, but STEC can still be present with other diarrheal patterns.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR STEC Positive Interpretation | Shiga Toxin, E. coli O157, HUS Risk, Culture, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2691,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get urgent medical help?",
      "answer": "Seek urgent care for worsening symptoms, dehydration, low urine output, pallor, bruising, or severe pain.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR STEC Positive Interpretation | Shiga Toxin, E. coli O157, HUS Risk, Culture, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-stec-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2692,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does one positive target explain all symptoms?",
      "answer": "Not always. Co-detections are common on travel panels, and one organism may be more important than the others.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Travel Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | ETEC, EAEC, Giardia, Viruses, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2693,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why are co-detections common on stool panels?",
      "answer": "Multiplex PCR panels can detect several organisms at once, including ones with different clinical importance.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Travel Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | ETEC, EAEC, Giardia, Viruses, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2694,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When does a parasite become more likely?",
      "answer": "Persistent symptoms, exposure to untreated water or food, and longer illness make parasites more likely.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Travel Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | ETEC, EAEC, Giardia, Viruses, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2695,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is stool culture still needed?",
      "answer": "Bloody diarrhea, severe illness, or need for susceptibility data can still justify culture.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Travel Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | ETEC, EAEC, Giardia, Viruses, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2696,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Do I need C. diff testing after antibiotics?",
      "answer": "If antibiotics were used and diarrhea persists, C. diff is part of the workup.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Travel Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | ETEC, EAEC, Giardia, Viruses, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2697,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I seek urgent care?",
      "answer": "Severe dehydration, high fever, blood, confusion, or severe pain should prompt prompt clinical review.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Travel Diarrhea Co-Detection Questions | ETEC, EAEC, Giardia, Viruses, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-travel-diarrhea-co-detection-questions.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2698,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Vibrio PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always. It is strongest when the symptoms and exposure fit vibriosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Vibrio Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Seafood, Vibriosis, V. vulnificus, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2699,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is culture confirmation often recommended?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends culture confirmation when possible because CIDTs do not differentiate non-cholera Vibrio well enough for every treatment decision.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Vibrio Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Seafood, Vibriosis, V. vulnificus, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2700,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make Vibrio more likely?",
      "answer": "Raw or undercooked seafood, especially oysters, and exposure to coastal or brackish water are classic clues.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Vibrio Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Seafood, Vibriosis, V. vulnificus, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2701,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can Vibrio become severe?",
      "answer": "Yes. Some species, especially V. vulnificus, can cause severe bloodstream or wound infections in high-risk people.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Vibrio Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Seafood, Vibriosis, V. vulnificus, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2702,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is this more urgent?",
      "answer": "Wound exposure, fever, low blood pressure, blistering skin lesions, liver disease, or immune risk should prompt urgent evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Vibrio Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Seafood, Vibriosis, V. vulnificus, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2703,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Treatment depends on the species, site of infection, severity, and clinical judgment.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Vibrio Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Seafood, Vibriosis, V. vulnificus, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-vibrio-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2704,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive Yersinia PCR always mean active infection?",
      "answer": "Not always. It is strongest when symptoms, exposure timing, and clinical context fit Yersinia gastroenteritis.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Yersinia Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Y. enterocolitica, Iron Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2705,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might culture still be ordered?",
      "answer": "Culture can confirm the organism, allow further characterization, and help with public-health or lab follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Yersinia Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Y. enterocolitica, Iron Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2706,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What exposures make Yersinia more likely?",
      "answer": "Undercooked pork, contaminated food or water, and other gastrointestinal exposures can matter; Y. enterocolitica is the usual stool target.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Yersinia Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Y. enterocolitica, Iron Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2707,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can Yersinia mimic appendicitis?",
      "answer": "Yes. Abdominal pain, fever, and mesenteric adenitis can look like appendicitis in some cases.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Yersinia Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Y. enterocolitica, Iron Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2708,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who is at higher risk for severe disease?",
      "answer": "People with high iron states, iron chelation, or immune risk can have more severe infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Yersinia Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Y. enterocolitica, Iron Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2709,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Does a positive PCR mean I need antibiotics?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Treatment depends on severity, risk factors, and clinician judgment.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool PCR Yersinia Positive Interpretation | CIDT, Culture, Y. enterocolitica, Iron Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-pcr-yersinia-positive-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2710,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a low stool pH suggest?",
      "answer": "It can suggest carbohydrate fermentation in the colon, but the age and symptom context matter a lot.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool pH and Reducing Substances Test | Carbohydrate Malabsorption and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2711,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What are reducing substances?",
      "answer": "They are sugars or sugar-like compounds that can react on the test and suggest unabsorbed carbohydrate in stool.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool pH and Reducing Substances Test | Carbohydrate Malabsorption and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2712,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is this a good adult gut-health test?",
      "answer": "No. It is much more useful in a specific pediatric diarrhea workup than as an adult wellness screen.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool pH and Reducing Substances Test | Carbohydrate Malabsorption and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2713,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can sample handling change the result?",
      "answer": "Yes. Bacteria can keep metabolizing sugars after collection, which can change the measurement.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool pH and Reducing Substances Test | Carbohydrate Malabsorption and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2714,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a low result prove lactose intolerance?",
      "answer": "No. It can point that direction, but better-targeted testing may still be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool pH and Reducing Substances Test | Carbohydrate Malabsorption and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2715,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What test often works better in adults?",
      "answer": "Hydrogen breath testing, diet trials, or other GI evaluation often provide more useful information.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool pH and Reducing Substances Test | Carbohydrate Malabsorption and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-ph-reducing-substances-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2716,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a microbiome test the same as a stool test?",
      "answer": "No. A stool test is usually ordered to answer a clinical question such as infection, blood, inflammation, or malabsorption. A microbiome test usually describes microbial patterns or wellness-style scores.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Test vs Microbiome Test | Diagnosis, Gut Reports, and Consumer Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2717,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a microbiome report diagnose disease?",
      "answer": "Usually not. Consumer microbiome reports are often built around patterns and comparisons, not a diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Test vs Microbiome Test | Diagnosis, Gut Reports, and Consumer Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2718,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is a medical stool test more useful?",
      "answer": "If you have diarrhea, blood, fever, weight loss, dehydration, severe pain, or a specific infection question, a clinician-directed stool test is usually the better fit.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Test vs Microbiome Test | Diagnosis, Gut Reports, and Consumer Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2719,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do microbiome reports vary so much?",
      "answer": "Methods, databases, sample handling, diet, medications, illness, and timing can all change the result, which makes cross-company comparisons hard.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Test vs Microbiome Test | Diagnosis, Gut Reports, and Consumer Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2720,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I act on supplements or restrictions from a microbiome report?",
      "answer": "Only if there is real evidence that the exact action improves a relevant outcome. Otherwise the report may be interesting without being medically useful.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Test vs Microbiome Test | Diagnosis, Gut Reports, and Consumer Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2721,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before buying a report?",
      "answer": "Ask what question the test is meant to answer, whether the company is making a disease claim, and whether a standard stool test would be more useful for your symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool Test vs Microbiome Test | Diagnosis, Gut Reports, and Consumer Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-test-vs-microbiome-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2722,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a positive stool WBC prove infection?",
      "answer": "No. It supports inflammation, but the cause could be infection, IBD, ischemia, or another inflammatory process.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool WBC Test | Fecal Leukocytes, Inflammatory Diarrhea, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2723,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a negative stool WBC rule out inflammation?",
      "answer": "No. White cells break down and the test is not sensitive enough to rule out inflammatory diarrhea on its own.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool WBC Test | Fecal Leukocytes, Inflammatory Diarrhea, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2724,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is calprotectin often preferred?",
      "answer": "Calprotectin is usually a more durable marker of intestinal inflammation and is often more useful when the question is IBD versus IBS.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool WBC Test | Fecal Leukocytes, Inflammatory Diarrhea, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2725,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should a stool culture or PCR panel be ordered instead?",
      "answer": "When infection is the real question, especially with fever, blood, travel exposure, outbreak risk, or more severe symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool WBC Test | Fecal Leukocytes, Inflammatory Diarrhea, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2726,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does stool WBC testing help with C. diff?",
      "answer": "Only indirectly. Specific C. diff testing is usually the better way to answer that question.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool WBC Test | Fecal Leukocytes, Inflammatory Diarrhea, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2727,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is this urgent?",
      "answer": "Dehydration, blood in stool, severe pain, high fever, or immunocompromise should prompt prompt medical care.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool WBC Test | Fecal Leukocytes, Inflammatory Diarrhea, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2728,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "What if the stool WBC is negative but the illness is still severe?",
      "answer": "That should not be reassuring enough to delay care; a broader infection workup or urgent evaluation may still be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Stool WBC Test | Fecal Leukocytes, Inflammatory Diarrhea, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/stool-wbc-test-inflammatory-diarrhea.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2729,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is stool testing alone often not enough?",
      "answer": "Larvae can be shed intermittently, so one stool sample may miss infection even when Strongyloides is present.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Antibody vs Stool Test | Serology, Larvae, Eosinophils, and Steroid Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2730,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When is antibody testing more useful?",
      "answer": "Serology is often useful when chronic infection is suspected or when stool exams are negative but exposure risk is real.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Antibody vs Stool Test | Serology, Larvae, Eosinophils, and Steroid Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2731,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a positive antibody mean a past infection?",
      "answer": "Yes. Antibodies may persist after treatment or past exposure, so the result needs clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Antibody vs Stool Test | Serology, Larvae, Eosinophils, and Steroid Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2732,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why is Strongyloides high-stakes before steroids?",
      "answer": "Immunosuppression can trigger hyperinfection or disseminated disease, which can be severe or fatal.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Antibody vs Stool Test | Serology, Larvae, Eosinophils, and Steroid Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2733,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should eosinophils be used alone?",
      "answer": "No. Eosinophils can be helpful context, but normal counts do not rule Strongyloides out.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Antibody vs Stool Test | Serology, Larvae, Eosinophils, and Steroid Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2734,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician can decide whether stool exams, serology, treatment, or infectious disease input is the safest next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Antibody vs Stool Test | Serology, Larvae, Eosinophils, and Steroid Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-antibody-vs-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2735,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "When should stool follow-up happen after treatment?",
      "answer": "CDC notes that people with positive stool exams and persistent symptoms should have follow-up stool exams 2 to 4 weeks after treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Stool Exams, Serology, Ivermectin, Persistent Symptoms, and Immunosuppression",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2736,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative repeat stool test prove cure?",
      "answer": "It is reassuring, but it does not always settle the question if symptoms, eosinophilia, or exposure risk remain.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Stool Exams, Serology, Ivermectin, Persistent Symptoms, and Immunosuppression",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2737,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can serology prove cure?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Antibody trends can help, but results decline slowly and may stay positive after treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Stool Exams, Serology, Ivermectin, Persistent Symptoms, and Immunosuppression",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2738,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does immune suppression matter so much?",
      "answer": "Untreated Strongyloides can become severe during corticosteroids or other immunosuppression.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Stool Exams, Serology, Ivermectin, Persistent Symptoms, and Immunosuppression",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2739,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should everyone get the same follow-up?",
      "answer": "No. The right follow-up depends on the original test type, symptoms, exposure risk, and immune status.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Stool Exams, Serology, Ivermectin, Persistent Symptoms, and Immunosuppression",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2740,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "A clinician can decide whether another stool exam, serology, treatment, or specialist input is the safest next step.",
      "pageTitle": "Strongyloides Treatment Follow-Up Testing | Stool Exams, Serology, Ivermectin, Persistent Symptoms, and Immunosuppression",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/strongyloides-treatment-follow-up-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2741,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is one blood test enough to diagnose syphilis?",
      "answer": "CDC says a presumptive diagnosis of syphilis requires two types of serologic tests: a nontreponemal test, such as RPR or VDRL, and a treponemal test, such as TP-PA, EIA, CIA, immunoblot, or a rapid treponemal test.",
      "pageTitle": "Syphilis Testing Guide | RPR, VDRL, Treponemal Tests, Titers, Pregnancy, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2742,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is the difference between RPR and treponemal tests?",
      "answer": "RPR and VDRL are nontreponemal tests that can be reported as titers and used to monitor treatment response. Treponemal tests detect antibodies more specific to the syphilis bacterium and often stay reactive after prior infection or treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Syphilis Testing Guide | RPR, VDRL, Treponemal Tests, Titers, Pregnancy, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2743,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does an RPR titer mean?",
      "answer": "An RPR or VDRL titer is a dilution-based number that helps clinicians estimate activity and monitor response after treatment. CDC says a fourfold titer change, such as 1:16 to 1:4, is usually needed to show a clinically meaningful change.",
      "pageTitle": "Syphilis Testing Guide | RPR, VDRL, Treponemal Tests, Titers, Pregnancy, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2744,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can syphilis tests stay positive after treatment?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC notes that most people with reactive treponemal tests remain reactive for life, while nontreponemal titers often decrease after treatment but may persist at low levels in some people.",
      "pageTitle": "Syphilis Testing Guide | RPR, VDRL, Treponemal Tests, Titers, Pregnancy, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2745,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who should be screened for syphilis?",
      "answer": "CDC recommends syphilis testing based on pregnancy, geography, HIV status, sexual practices, partner exposure, local epidemiology, and other risk factors. Pregnant people should be screened early, with repeat testing for some people later in pregnancy and at delivery.",
      "pageTitle": "Syphilis Testing Guide | RPR, VDRL, Treponemal Tests, Titers, Pregnancy, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2746,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When do syphilis symptoms need urgent evaluation?",
      "answer": "Urgent clinical evaluation is important for neurologic symptoms, vision changes, eye pain, hearing loss, severe headache, stroke-like symptoms, pregnancy, a partner diagnosed with syphilis, or sores, ulcers, rash, or symptoms that could fit early syphilis.",
      "pageTitle": "Syphilis Testing Guide | RPR, VDRL, Treponemal Tests, Titers, Pregnancy, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/syphilis-testing-guide.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2747,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does Taenia stool testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for eggs or proglottids in stool, and sometimes a visible segment helps the lab or clinician make the diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Taenia Tapeworm Stool Test | Eggs, Proglottids, Pork and Beef Exposure, and Species Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2748,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does species identification matter?",
      "answer": "Because T. solium can lead to cysticercosis, while other Taenia species have a different risk profile.",
      "pageTitle": "Taenia Tapeworm Stool Test | Eggs, Proglottids, Pork and Beef Exposure, and Species Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2749,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can a single stool sample miss Taenia?",
      "answer": "Yes. Eggs or proglottids may not appear early, so a negative early sample does not always settle the question.",
      "pageTitle": "Taenia Tapeworm Stool Test | Eggs, Proglottids, Pork and Beef Exposure, and Species Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2750,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does pork or beef exposure matter?",
      "answer": "Yes. Exposure to raw or undercooked pork or beef helps the clinician think about the likely Taenia species.",
      "pageTitle": "Taenia Tapeworm Stool Test | Eggs, Proglottids, Pork and Beef Exposure, and Species Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2751,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if I saw a worm segment?",
      "answer": "Save a photo if possible and tell the clinician, because a segment can help the lab identify the organism.",
      "pageTitle": "Taenia Tapeworm Stool Test | Eggs, Proglottids, Pork and Beef Exposure, and Species Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2752,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I seek care sooner?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up matters more if there are neurologic symptoms, severe abdominal pain, vomiting, dehydration, or other red flags.",
      "pageTitle": "Taenia Tapeworm Stool Test | Eggs, Proglottids, Pork and Beef Exposure, and Species Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2753,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "When does stool testing need more than species context?",
      "answer": "If headaches, seizures, eye symptoms, or other neurologic signs are present, clinicians may need to think about cysticercosis instead of only intestinal taeniasis.",
      "pageTitle": "Taenia Tapeworm Stool Test | Eggs, Proglottids, Pork and Beef Exposure, and Species Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/taenia-tapeworm-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2754,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What are target cells on a blood smear?",
      "answer": "Target cells, also called codocytes, are red cells with a bullseye-like appearance on smear.",
      "pageTitle": "Target Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Codocytes, Liver Disease, Thalassemia, Iron Deficiency, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2755,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Do target cells always mean thalassemia?",
      "answer": "No. Thalassemia is a classic cause, but target cells can also appear with liver disease, iron deficiency, hemoglobin variants, and after spleen removal or reduced spleen function.",
      "pageTitle": "Target Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Codocytes, Liver Disease, Thalassemia, Iron Deficiency, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2756,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do liver problems matter here?",
      "answer": "Liver disease can change red-cell membrane composition and produce target cells, so liver tests help interpret the smear.",
      "pageTitle": "Target Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Codocytes, Liver Disease, Thalassemia, Iron Deficiency, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2757,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What tests are often checked next?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up includes CBC indices, ferritin and iron studies, liver tests, bilirubin, and hemoglobin electrophoresis when a hemoglobin disorder is possible.",
      "pageTitle": "Target Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Codocytes, Liver Disease, Thalassemia, Iron Deficiency, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2758,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can target cells appear after spleen removal?",
      "answer": "Yes. Reduced spleen function or splenectomy can allow abnormal red-cell shapes to persist in circulation.",
      "pageTitle": "Target Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Codocytes, Liver Disease, Thalassemia, Iron Deficiency, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2759,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is the finding more important?",
      "answer": "It matters more when target cells are numerous or when the CBC shows microcytosis, anemia, abnormal liver tests, known hemoglobin disorder risk, or a relevant spleen history.",
      "pageTitle": "Target Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Codocytes, Liver Disease, Thalassemia, Iron Deficiency, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/target-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2760,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Do teardrop cells always mean cancer?",
      "answer": "No. They can show up in benign or nonspecific settings, but a persistent or prominent pattern raises concern for marrow stress or infiltration.",
      "pageTitle": "Teardrop Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Dacrocytes, Myelofibrosis, Marrow Infiltration, Anemia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2761,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can teardrop cells be an artifact?",
      "answer": "Yes. A few isolated cells can come from slide preparation, so the overall smear pattern matters more than one cell shape.",
      "pageTitle": "Teardrop Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Dacrocytes, Myelofibrosis, Marrow Infiltration, Anemia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2762,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What other smear clues make teardrops more important?",
      "answer": "NRBCs, immature granulocytes, anemia, abnormal platelets, and a leukoerythroblastic picture make the finding more meaningful.",
      "pageTitle": "Teardrop Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Dacrocytes, Myelofibrosis, Marrow Infiltration, Anemia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2763,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What conditions are often considered?",
      "answer": "Myelofibrosis, myelophthisic anemia from marrow infiltration, severe iron deficiency, and thalassemia major are common considerations.",
      "pageTitle": "Teardrop Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Dacrocytes, Myelofibrosis, Marrow Infiltration, Anemia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2764,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up is common?",
      "answer": "Clinicians may repeat the smear, review CBC indices, check iron studies or hemolysis markers, and refer to hematology if the pattern persists.",
      "pageTitle": "Teardrop Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Dacrocytes, Myelofibrosis, Marrow Infiltration, Anemia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2765,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why do people mention the spleen?",
      "answer": "Spleen enlargement can appear in marrow-fibrosis and infiltrative states, so it helps interpret the smear in context.",
      "pageTitle": "Teardrop Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Dacrocytes, Myelofibrosis, Marrow Infiltration, Anemia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2766,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "When should teardrop cells be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Prompt medical guidance is important if teardrop cells appear with severe shortness of breath, chest pain, bleeding, jaundice, low hemoglobin, low platelets, blasts, or a smear that suggests marrow infiltration or leukoerythroblastic change.",
      "pageTitle": "Teardrop Cells on Blood Smear Interpretation | Dacrocytes, Myelofibrosis, Marrow Infiltration, Anemia, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/teardrop-cells-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2767,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "When is telomere biology disorder testing usually considered?",
      "answer": "It is usually considered when bone marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, unusual liver disease, mucocutaneous findings, or a strong family history makes a telomere disorder plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "Telomere biology disorder genetic testing | Dyskeratosis congenita, short telomeres, marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2768,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does telomere length testing replace gene testing?",
      "answer": "No. Telomere length can support the suspicion and help with interpretation, but gene testing is still needed to look for the causal variant when one is present.",
      "pageTitle": "Telomere biology disorder genetic testing | Dyskeratosis congenita, short telomeres, marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2769,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do panels matter for telomere disorders?",
      "answer": "Many genes can cause overlapping telomere biology disorders, so a broader panel can be more useful than single-gene testing when the phenotype is not specific.",
      "pageTitle": "Telomere biology disorder genetic testing | Dyskeratosis congenita, short telomeres, marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2770,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does a negative result mean?",
      "answer": "A negative result lowers the chance of a known genetic cause, but it does not always settle the question if the phenotype is strong, the panel was limited, or testing did not cover all relevant variant types.",
      "pageTitle": "Telomere biology disorder genetic testing | Dyskeratosis congenita, short telomeres, marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2771,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does family screening matter?",
      "answer": "A confirmed pathogenic variant can change screening, transplant planning, cancer surveillance, and testing for relatives who may not yet have symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Telomere biology disorder genetic testing | Dyskeratosis congenita, short telomeres, marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2772,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should clinicians think about telomere length before transplant?",
      "answer": "Telomere-related disease can affect transplant risk and supportive care, so the pre-test question matters before major marrow or lung interventions are planned.",
      "pageTitle": "Telomere biology disorder genetic testing | Dyskeratosis congenita, short telomeres, marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and family screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/telomere-biology-disorder-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2773,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What time of day should testosterone be tested?",
      "answer": "For adult men being evaluated for low testosterone, guidelines commonly emphasize an early morning blood draw because testosterone varies during the day. The exact timing should follow the clinician's and lab's instructions.",
      "pageTitle": "Testosterone Levels Test | Low T, Total vs Free, Morning Timing, SHBG, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2774,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does one low testosterone result prove low T?",
      "answer": "Usually no. A low value should be interpreted with symptoms, health context, assay method, and repeat testing. AUA guidance emphasizes two early morning total testosterone measurements on separate occasions for diagnosing low testosterone in adult men.",
      "pageTitle": "Testosterone Levels Test | Low T, Total vs Free, Morning Timing, SHBG, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2775,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the difference between total and free testosterone?",
      "answer": "Total testosterone includes testosterone bound to proteins plus unbound testosterone. Free testosterone refers to the unbound fraction. Free or bioavailable testosterone may be useful when SHBG or albumin changes make total testosterone harder to interpret.",
      "pageTitle": "Testosterone Levels Test | Low T, Total vs Free, Morning Timing, SHBG, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2776,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What follow-up labs are often considered after a low testosterone result?",
      "answer": "Depending on the situation, follow-up may include repeat morning total testosterone, free testosterone or SHBG, LH, FSH, prolactin, thyroid tests, CBC or hematocrit, metabolic labs, and sometimes pituitary or fertility evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Testosterone Levels Test | Low T, Total vs Free, Morning Timing, SHBG, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2777,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can testosterone testing explain fatigue by itself?",
      "answer": "No. Fatigue is nonspecific. Testosterone testing can be part of an evaluation when symptoms fit, but sleep, mood, anemia, thyroid disease, medications, chronic illness, overtraining, nutrition, and other causes may also need attention.",
      "pageTitle": "Testosterone Levels Test | Low T, Total vs Free, Morning Timing, SHBG, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2778,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is testosterone therapy approved for normal aging alone?",
      "answer": "FDA information says testosterone products are approved for men with low testosterone levels together with an associated medical condition, not simply for age-related low levels without an associated condition. Treatment decisions should be clinician-guided and monitored.",
      "pageTitle": "Testosterone Levels Test | Low T, Total vs Free, Morning Timing, SHBG, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/testosterone-levels-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2779,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a prolonged thrombin time mean?",
      "answer": "It often means something is interfering with the final conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin, such as heparin, a direct thrombin inhibitor, low fibrinogen, abnormal fibrinogen, or fibrin degradation products.",
      "pageTitle": "Thrombin Time and Reptilase Time Testing | Heparin, Fibrinogen, Dysfibrinogenemia, and Prolonged Clotting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2780,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why order reptilase time with thrombin time?",
      "answer": "Reptilase time helps separate heparin effect from fibrinogen-related problems because reptilase is not affected by heparin the way thrombin is.",
      "pageTitle": "Thrombin Time and Reptilase Time Testing | Heparin, Fibrinogen, Dysfibrinogenemia, and Prolonged Clotting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2781,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "If thrombin time is prolonged but reptilase time is normal, what is the pattern?",
      "answer": "That pattern points toward heparin exposure or contamination, or sometimes another thrombin inhibitor, depending on the clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Thrombin Time and Reptilase Time Testing | Heparin, Fibrinogen, Dysfibrinogenemia, and Prolonged Clotting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2782,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "If both thrombin time and reptilase time are prolonged, what is the pattern?",
      "answer": "That pattern raises concern for low fibrinogen, abnormal fibrinogen, or fibrin(ogen) split products, with liver disease or DIC often considered in the right setting.",
      "pageTitle": "Thrombin Time and Reptilase Time Testing | Heparin, Fibrinogen, Dysfibrinogenemia, and Prolonged Clotting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2783,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why are these not routine screening tests?",
      "answer": "Because PT/INR, aPTT, fibrinogen, platelet count, and the clinical story usually answer the first pass questions more efficiently.",
      "pageTitle": "Thrombin Time and Reptilase Time Testing | Heparin, Fibrinogen, Dysfibrinogenemia, and Prolonged Clotting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2784,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What usually happens after an abnormal result?",
      "answer": "Clinicians usually review medications, repeat the specimen if needed, and check fibrinogen, D-dimer, PT/INR, aPTT, and sometimes factor assays or specialist interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Thrombin Time and Reptilase Time Testing | Heparin, Fibrinogen, Dysfibrinogenemia, and Prolonged Clotting",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thrombin-time-reptilase-time-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2785,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main difference between TEG and ROTEM?",
      "answer": "Both are viscoelastic whole-blood clotting tests. The main difference is the instrument design and the way the sample is activated and measured, not the basic clinical idea.",
      "pageTitle": "Thromboelastography and ROTEM Testing | Viscoelastic Hemostasis, Clot Strength, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2786,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can TEG or ROTEM replace PT and aPTT?",
      "answer": "No. They add a different view of clotting, but PT, aPTT, fibrinogen, platelet count, and drug-specific tests still matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Thromboelastography and ROTEM Testing | Viscoelastic Hemostasis, Clot Strength, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2787,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does low clot strength usually mean?",
      "answer": "It can suggest low fibrinogen, low platelets, or platelet dysfunction, but the full clinical context matters.",
      "pageTitle": "Thromboelastography and ROTEM Testing | Viscoelastic Hemostasis, Clot Strength, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2788,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What does hyperfibrinolysis mean?",
      "answer": "It means the clot is breaking down too quickly. In selected bleeding settings, that can support antifibrinolytic treatment decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Thromboelastography and ROTEM Testing | Viscoelastic Hemostasis, Clot Strength, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2789,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is TEG or ROTEM most useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful when bleeding is active and clinicians need fast guidance during trauma, surgery, transplant, or other high-acuity care.",
      "pageTitle": "Thromboelastography and ROTEM Testing | Viscoelastic Hemostasis, Clot Strength, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2790,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should I expect this test in routine outpatient workups?",
      "answer": "Usually no. It is mainly an acute-care and procedural decision tool rather than a routine wellness or screening test.",
      "pageTitle": "Thromboelastography and ROTEM Testing | Viscoelastic Hemostasis, Clot Strength, and Fibrinolysis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/thromboelastography-rotem-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2791,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is TMEM127?",
      "answer": "TMEM127 is a tumor-suppressor gene in the PPGL cluster 2/kinase-signaling group. Pathogenic variants are linked most often with pheochromocytoma and less often with paraganglioma, so the phenotype and sample type matter as much as the variant itself.",
      "pageTitle": "TMEM127 Genetic Testing | Pheochromocytoma, Cluster 2, Family Follow-Up, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2792,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a TMEM127 pathogenic variant mean inherited risk?",
      "answer": "If the result is confirmed in blood, saliva, or another normal tissue, it can mean inherited risk for the patient and relatives. If the finding is only in tumor tissue, you still need germline confirmation before you call it familial.",
      "pageTitle": "TMEM127 Genetic Testing | Pheochromocytoma, Cluster 2, Family Follow-Up, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2793,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is TMEM127 more often pheochromocytoma or paraganglioma?",
      "answer": "TMEM127 mutations occur most commonly in pheochromocytoma and are rarer in other paragangliomas. That pattern is one reason it is usually discussed as part of a broader hereditary PPGL panel rather than in isolation.",
      "pageTitle": "TMEM127 Genetic Testing | Pheochromocytoma, Cluster 2, Family Follow-Up, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2794,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested if TMEM127 is positive?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic germline TMEM127 variant is confirmed, first-degree relatives are often offered targeted testing for the known family variant. If the result is a VUS or tumor-only finding, the family plan is different.",
      "pageTitle": "TMEM127 Genetic Testing | Pheochromocytoma, Cluster 2, Family Follow-Up, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2795,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if TMEM127 testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative TMEM127 result does not rule out hereditary PPGL. Other genes, including SDHx, VHL, RET, NF1, MAX, and EPAS1, may still explain the tumor pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "TMEM127 Genetic Testing | Pheochromocytoma, Cluster 2, Family Follow-Up, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2796,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up is common after TMEM127 testing?",
      "answer": "Follow-up often includes genetics review, confirmation of sample type, plasma or urine metanephrines, imaging as indicated, and a surveillance plan that fits the exact phenotype and family history.",
      "pageTitle": "TMEM127 Genetic Testing | Pheochromocytoma, Cluster 2, Family Follow-Up, and Surveillance",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tmem127-pheochromocytoma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2797,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a low total protein mean?",
      "answer": "A low total protein result can happen when albumin is low, globulins are low, or both are low. Common contexts include liver disease, kidney protein loss, malnutrition, and some digestive conditions.",
      "pageTitle": "Total protein, globulin, and A/G ratio interpretation | Liver, kidney, immune, and inflammation context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2798,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a low A/G ratio mean?",
      "answer": "A low albumin/globulin ratio usually means albumin is relatively low, globulin is relatively high, or both. It often points toward liver disease, kidney disease, inflammation, or immune-system activity.",
      "pageTitle": "Total protein, globulin, and A/G ratio interpretation | Liver, kidney, immune, and inflammation context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2799,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does a high total protein mean?",
      "answer": "A high total protein result can reflect dehydration or a rise in globulins from inflammation, chronic infection, or abnormal antibody proteins. The albumin and globulin values matter more than the total alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Total protein, globulin, and A/G ratio interpretation | Liver, kidney, immune, and inflammation context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2800,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When is protein electrophoresis helpful?",
      "answer": "Protein electrophoresis helps when globulins are high, the A/G ratio is low, or there is concern for an abnormal antibody pattern. It separates protein fractions instead of giving only one combined number.",
      "pageTitle": "Total protein, globulin, and A/G ratio interpretation | Liver, kidney, immune, and inflammation context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2801,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why would immunoglobulin testing be ordered?",
      "answer": "Immunoglobulin testing helps when a globulin pattern suggests too much or too little antibody production, or when immune-system disorders are part of the question.",
      "pageTitle": "Total protein, globulin, and A/G ratio interpretation | Liver, kidney, immune, and inflammation context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2802,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Do I need to fast for this test?",
      "answer": "Sometimes only if the protein test was part of a broader panel that requires fasting. The ordering clinician or lab instructions should say whether fasting is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Total protein, globulin, and A/G ratio interpretation | Liver, kidney, immune, and inflammation context",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/total-protein-globulin-ag-ratio-test.html#faq-heading",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2803,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does toxic granulation mean on a blood smear?",
      "answer": "Toxic granulation means neutrophils have darker, more prominent granules on a peripheral blood smear. It is a morphology clue often seen with infection, inflammation, tissue injury, burns, pregnancy, chemotherapy, growth-factor treatment, or other marrow stress, but it is not a diagnosis by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxic Granulation on Blood Smear | Infection, Inflammation, Neutrophils, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2804,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does toxic granulation mean sepsis?",
      "answer": "No. Toxic granulation can appear in sepsis or serious bacterial infection, but it does not prove sepsis by itself. Symptoms, vital signs, WBC, neutrophil count, left shift, cultures, lactate, organ function, and clinician assessment determine urgency.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxic Granulation on Blood Smear | Infection, Inflammation, Neutrophils, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2805,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What are toxic changes in neutrophils?",
      "answer": "Toxic changes usually refer to toxic granulation, Dohle bodies, and cytoplasmic vacuoles in neutrophils. They often appear with inflammatory or infectious stress and should be interpreted with the whole CBC, smear, symptoms, and sample context.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxic Granulation on Blood Smear | Infection, Inflammation, Neutrophils, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2806,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can medications cause toxic granulation?",
      "answer": "Yes. Growth-factor treatment such as G-CSF, chemotherapy recovery, corticosteroid context, and other treatment settings can affect neutrophil patterns. Recent medications and treatment timing should be reviewed before assuming infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxic Granulation on Blood Smear | Infection, Inflammation, Neutrophils, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2807,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up may be needed for toxic granulation?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, manual smear review, infection or inflammation evaluation, cultures or imaging when clinically appropriate, chemistry tests, CRP or other inflammatory markers when ordered, medication review, and urgent care if symptoms suggest severe infection or sepsis.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxic Granulation on Blood Smear | Infection, Inflammation, Neutrophils, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2808,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should toxic granulation be treated as urgent?",
      "answer": "Seek prompt medical guidance if toxic granulation is reported with fever, chills, low blood pressure, confusion, shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, severe pain, severe weakness, low neutrophils, very high or very low WBC, rapidly worsening counts, low platelets, or signs of severe infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxic Granulation on Blood Smear | Infection, Inflammation, Neutrophils, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxic-granulation-blood-smear-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2809,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why is stool testing usually not the answer?",
      "answer": "Humans do not carry adult Toxocara worms in the intestine, so eggs usually are not found in stool.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxocara Antibody Testing | Visceral Larva Migrans, Ocular Toxocariasis, Eosinophils, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2810,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does a positive antibody usually mean?",
      "answer": "It supports exposure and possible infection, but it still needs clinical context to interpret correctly.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxocara Antibody Testing | Visceral Larva Migrans, Ocular Toxocariasis, Eosinophils, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2811,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can ocular toxocariasis have a low or negative blood test?",
      "answer": "Yes. CDC notes that serum antibody levels can be low or absent despite ocular disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxocara Antibody Testing | Visceral Larva Migrans, Ocular Toxocariasis, Eosinophils, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2812,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do eosinophils matter?",
      "answer": "Eosinophilia can support a tissue-migrating parasite pattern, especially with exposure history.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxocara Antibody Testing | Visceral Larva Migrans, Ocular Toxocariasis, Eosinophils, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2813,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Who should interpret the result?",
      "answer": "Ophthalmology and infectious disease input can be important, especially if the eye is involved.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxocara Antibody Testing | Visceral Larva Migrans, Ocular Toxocariasis, Eosinophils, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2814,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What else can mimic toxocariasis?",
      "answer": "Other helminths and non-parasitic causes can look similar, so the diagnosis is usually clinical and presumptive.",
      "pageTitle": "Toxocara Antibody Testing | Visceral Larva Migrans, Ocular Toxocariasis, Eosinophils, and Exposure",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/toxocara-antibody-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2815,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a TP53 variant mean Li-Fraumeni syndrome?",
      "answer": "Not necessarily. TP53 variants can be somatic changes in the cancer cells or inherited germline variants. Li-Fraumeni syndrome refers to the inherited cancer predisposition pattern, not every TP53 result.",
      "pageTitle": "TP53 Testing in Blood Cancer Workups | AML, MDS, Tumor Sequencing, Germline Risk, and Li-Fraumeni",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2816,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why is TP53 testing used in blood cancers?",
      "answer": "It can help with tumor biology, prognosis, treatment planning, and sometimes inherited cancer-risk evaluation when the personal or family history suggests a germline TP53 variant.",
      "pageTitle": "TP53 Testing in Blood Cancer Workups | AML, MDS, Tumor Sequencing, Germline Risk, and Li-Fraumeni",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2817,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can tumor or bone marrow testing tell if TP53 is inherited?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. Tumor or marrow sequencing can show a TP53 change, but germline confirmation may need blood, saliva, skin fibroblasts, or another validated specimen chosen for the clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "TP53 Testing in Blood Cancer Workups | AML, MDS, Tumor Sequencing, Germline Risk, and Li-Fraumeni",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2818,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why does specimen type matter so much?",
      "answer": "If the sample contains leukemia or marrow tumor cells, the TP53 result may reflect the cancer rather than inherited DNA. The report should clearly say what specimen was tested and what question it was meant to answer.",
      "pageTitle": "TP53 Testing in Blood Cancer Workups | AML, MDS, Tumor Sequencing, Germline Risk, and Li-Fraumeni",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2819,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What does a germline TP53 result change?",
      "answer": "It can change screening, family counseling, and how radiation exposure or future cancer risk is discussed. It can also affect testing for relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "TP53 Testing in Blood Cancer Workups | AML, MDS, Tumor Sequencing, Germline Risk, and Li-Fraumeni",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2820,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What if TP53 is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative TP53 result does not rule out other hereditary cancer genes or non-genetic reasons for the blood cancer. It only lowers the chance that TP53 is the explanation.",
      "pageTitle": "TP53 Testing in Blood Cancer Workups | AML, MDS, Tumor Sequencing, Germline Risk, and Li-Fraumeni",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tp53-testing-blood-cancer-workups.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2821,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is trichomoniasis included in every full STI panel?",
      "answer": "No. Full STI panel is not a standardized term, and trichomoniasis may or may not be included. Ask whether T. vaginalis or trichomoniasis testing is included by name.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichomoniasis Testing | Why Trich May Be Missing From STI Panels",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichomoniasis-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichomoniasis-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichomoniasis-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2822,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What test is used for trichomoniasis?",
      "answer": "CDC says wet mount microscopy has low sensitivity, while NAATs are highly sensitive and detect more T. vaginalis infections among women. Available sample types depend on the specific test.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichomoniasis Testing | Why Trich May Be Missing From STI Panels",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichomoniasis-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichomoniasis-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichomoniasis-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2823,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does whipworm testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for Trichuris eggs in stool, usually through a stool ova and parasite examination.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichuris Stool Test | Whipworm Eggs, Diarrhea, Anemia, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Specimens",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2824,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one negative sample rule out whipworm?",
      "answer": "No. One sample can miss whipworm, so repeat stool specimens may be needed when suspicion remains.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichuris Stool Test | Whipworm Eggs, Diarrhea, Anemia, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Specimens",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2825,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do diarrhea and anemia show up?",
      "answer": "Whipworm can cause both, especially when the burden is larger, but they are not specific to whipworm.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichuris Stool Test | Whipworm Eggs, Diarrhea, Anemia, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Specimens",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2826,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "How does soil exposure matter?",
      "answer": "Whipworm is a soil-transmitted helminth, so contaminated soil exposure and travel can change the pre-test probability.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichuris Stool Test | Whipworm Eggs, Diarrhea, Anemia, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Specimens",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2827,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Could other parasites overlap?",
      "answer": "Yes. Hookworm and Ascaris can overlap in the same exposure setting, and Strongyloides may need a different testing approach.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichuris Stool Test | Whipworm Eggs, Diarrhea, Anemia, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Specimens",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2828,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get prompt care?",
      "answer": "Prompt care matters more with severe abdominal pain, dehydration, blood in stool, significant anemia symptoms, or immune suppression.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichuris Stool Test | Whipworm Eggs, Diarrhea, Anemia, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Specimens",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2829,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 7,
      "question": "When is treatment or care more important than another stool sample?",
      "answer": "If symptoms are worsening or anemia is significant, clinicians may treat or broaden the workup instead of waiting on another specimen.",
      "pageTitle": "Trichuris Stool Test | Whipworm Eggs, Diarrhea, Anemia, Soil Exposure, and Repeat Specimens",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trichuris-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2830,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a troponin blood test measure?",
      "answer": "A troponin blood test measures cardiac troponin proteins, usually troponin I or troponin T, that can leak into the blood when heart muscle cells are injured.",
      "pageTitle": "Troponin Blood Test Guide | High Troponin, Heart Attack, High-Sensitivity Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2831,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does high troponin always mean a heart attack?",
      "answer": "No. High troponin means heart muscle injury is possible or present, but the cause must be interpreted with symptoms, ECG findings, repeat troponin results, kidney function, heart failure, myocarditis, severe infection, and other clinical context.",
      "pageTitle": "Troponin Blood Test Guide | High Troponin, Heart Attack, High-Sensitivity Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2832,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is troponin repeated?",
      "answer": "Troponin is often repeated because a rising or falling pattern can help clinicians distinguish acute injury from a stable chronic elevation and can improve heart attack evaluation when symptoms began recently.",
      "pageTitle": "Troponin Blood Test Guide | High Troponin, Heart Attack, High-Sensitivity Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2833,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What is high-sensitivity troponin?",
      "answer": "High-sensitivity troponin assays can detect much lower amounts of cardiac troponin than older assays. They can help rule in or rule out myocardial injury faster, but they also require careful interpretation because small detectable values can occur for reasons other than a heart attack.",
      "pageTitle": "Troponin Blood Test Guide | High Troponin, Heart Attack, High-Sensitivity Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2834,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can kidney disease affect troponin results?",
      "answer": "Yes. Kidney disease can be associated with chronically elevated troponin or make interpretation more complex. Clinicians usually look at the absolute value, the lab's cutoff, change over time, symptoms, ECG, and other findings.",
      "pageTitle": "Troponin Blood Test Guide | High Troponin, Heart Attack, High-Sensitivity Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/troponin-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/troponin-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2835,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Who should think about Trypanosoma brucei testing?",
      "answer": "People with fever, swollen lymph nodes, neurologic changes, or sleep disturbance after travel to parts of sub-Saharan Africa where tsetse fly exposure is possible should be evaluated urgently.",
      "pageTitle": "Trypanosoma brucei testing | African sleeping sickness, travel exposure, and CSF",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2836,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a routine blood test rule it out?",
      "answer": "No. CDC notes that diagnosis can require blood, lymph node, chancre, or cerebrospinal fluid testing depending on the stage and subspecies.",
      "pageTitle": "Trypanosoma brucei testing | African sleeping sickness, travel exposure, and CSF",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2837,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the subspecies matter?",
      "answer": "T. b. gambiense and T. b. rhodesiense can differ in geography, symptom tempo, and the specimens most likely to help confirm the diagnosis.",
      "pageTitle": "Trypanosoma brucei testing | African sleeping sickness, travel exposure, and CSF",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2838,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why is cerebrospinal fluid testing sometimes needed?",
      "answer": "If nervous-system involvement is suspected, CSF helps determine staging, which guides treatment choice.",
      "pageTitle": "Trypanosoma brucei testing | African sleeping sickness, travel exposure, and CSF",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2839,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should I wait if symptoms are getting worse?",
      "answer": "No. This is a time-sensitive infectious disease workup and should be discussed promptly with a clinician or travel-medicine specialist.",
      "pageTitle": "Trypanosoma brucei testing | African sleeping sickness, travel exposure, and CSF",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2840,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I bring to the visit?",
      "answer": "Bring your travel dates, countries visited, rural or river exposure, tsetse fly exposure if known, symptom timing, and any prior test results.",
      "pageTitle": "Trypanosoma brucei testing | African sleeping sickness, travel exposure, and CSF",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/trypanosoma-brucei-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2841,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What genes are usually tested for TSC?",
      "answer": "Most testing starts with TSC1 and TSC2, often with sequencing plus deletion/duplication analysis.",
      "pageTitle": "TSC1/TSC2 genetic testing | tuberous sclerosis, mosaicism, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2842,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a negative blood test rule out TSC?",
      "answer": "No. A negative blood test does not fully exclude TSC, especially if mosaicism or a tissue-limited variant is possible.",
      "pageTitle": "TSC1/TSC2 genetic testing | tuberous sclerosis, mosaicism, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2843,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does mosaicism matter?",
      "answer": "Mosaicism means not every cell carries the same variant, so blood can miss the change even when the diagnosis is real.",
      "pageTitle": "TSC1/TSC2 genetic testing | tuberous sclerosis, mosaicism, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2844,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What screening may follow a positive result?",
      "answer": "Brain, kidney, skin, eye, heart, and lung follow-up may be considered depending on age and symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "TSC1/TSC2 genetic testing | tuberous sclerosis, mosaicism, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2845,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should siblings or children be tested?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic family variant is known, targeted cascade testing can identify relatives who need earlier screening.",
      "pageTitle": "TSC1/TSC2 genetic testing | tuberous sclerosis, mosaicism, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2846,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Is TSC just a skin condition?",
      "answer": "No. Skin findings are common, but TSC can also involve seizures, brain lesions, kidney angiomyolipomas, and adult lung disease.",
      "pageTitle": "TSC1/TSC2 genetic testing | tuberous sclerosis, mosaicism, and family follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsc1-tsc2-tuberous-sclerosis-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2847,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a TSH test measure?",
      "answer": "A TSH test measures thyroid-stimulating hormone, a pituitary hormone that signals the thyroid to make thyroid hormones. It is commonly used as an initial blood test for thyroid function.",
      "pageTitle": "TSH Thyroid Blood Test Guide | High, Low, Free T4, T3, Antibodies, and Biotin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2848,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What can high TSH mean?",
      "answer": "High TSH often suggests that the thyroid is not making enough thyroid hormone, but the result usually needs free T4, symptoms, medicines, pregnancy status, prior results, and sometimes antibody testing for context.",
      "pageTitle": "TSH Thyroid Blood Test Guide | High, Low, Free T4, T3, Antibodies, and Biotin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2849,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What can low TSH mean?",
      "answer": "Low TSH often suggests too much thyroid hormone signal, but follow-up may include free T4, T3, symptoms, medicines, thyroid history, and cause-focused testing.",
      "pageTitle": "TSH Thyroid Blood Test Guide | High, Low, Free T4, T3, Antibodies, and Biotin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2850,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can biotin affect thyroid blood tests?",
      "answer": "Yes. FDA and American Thyroid Association materials warn that biotin supplements can interfere with some lab tests, including thyroid tests, so readers should tell the ordering clinician and lab about biotin use before testing.",
      "pageTitle": "TSH Thyroid Blood Test Guide | High, Low, Free T4, T3, Antibodies, and Biotin",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tsh-thyroid-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2851,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main difference between tumor and inherited genetic testing?",
      "answer": "Tumor testing looks for changes in the cancer itself. Inherited testing looks for variants present from birth that may affect the person and their relatives.",
      "pageTitle": "Tumor Genomic Testing vs Inherited Genetic Testing | Somatic, Germline, Biomarkers, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2852,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a tumor finding mean the change is inherited?",
      "answer": "Sometimes, but not always. A tumor finding can suggest inherited risk, but a separate germline test is often needed to confirm it.",
      "pageTitle": "Tumor Genomic Testing vs Inherited Genetic Testing | Somatic, Germline, Biomarkers, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2853,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is biomarker testing done in cancer care?",
      "answer": "Biomarker testing can help choose treatment, match a clinical trial, or better classify the cancer.",
      "pageTitle": "Tumor Genomic Testing vs Inherited Genetic Testing | Somatic, Germline, Biomarkers, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2854,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should germline testing be considered after a tumor result?",
      "answer": "When the tumor result involves a gene tied to inherited risk, or when personal or family history makes inherited cancer risk plausible.",
      "pageTitle": "Tumor Genomic Testing vs Inherited Genetic Testing | Somatic, Germline, Biomarkers, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2855,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Does a negative germline test rule out all inherited risk?",
      "answer": "No. It can still leave family-history risk, testing-panel gaps, or a variant not included in the assay.",
      "pageTitle": "Tumor Genomic Testing vs Inherited Genetic Testing | Somatic, Germline, Biomarkers, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2856,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Who should help interpret the result?",
      "answer": "An oncologist, genetic counselor, or both are often useful when the result could change treatment, surveillance, or family testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Tumor Genomic Testing vs Inherited Genetic Testing | Somatic, Germline, Biomarkers, and Family Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/tumor-genomic-testing-vs-inherited-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2857,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a urinalysis test show?",
      "answer": "A urinalysis can check urine appearance, chemical dipstick results, and sometimes microscopic findings such as cells, casts, crystals, bacteria, or yeast. It can help evaluate UTI clues, kidney findings, diabetes-related glucose or ketones, dehydration patterns, and blood or protein in urine.",
      "pageTitle": "Urinalysis Test Guide | Dipstick, Microscopy, UTI, Kidney, Glucose, Protein, Blood, and Ketones",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2858,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Does a positive leukocyte esterase or nitrite result always mean a UTI?",
      "answer": "No. Leukocyte esterase suggests white blood cells in urine, and nitrites can suggest certain bacteria, but symptoms, sample quality, microscopy, and sometimes urine culture determine whether treatment is needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Urinalysis Test Guide | Dipstick, Microscopy, UTI, Kidney, Glucose, Protein, Blood, and Ketones",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2859,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What does blood on a urinalysis mean?",
      "answer": "Blood on urinalysis may come from UTI, stones, menstruation contamination, recent exercise, kidney disease, prostate or urinary tract conditions, or other causes. Persistent microscopic blood usually needs clinician-directed follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Urinalysis Test Guide | Dipstick, Microscopy, UTI, Kidney, Glucose, Protein, Blood, and Ketones",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2860,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is protein on a urine dipstick the same as UACR?",
      "answer": "No. A urine dipstick can flag protein, but urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR) is often preferred for kidney-risk screening and monitoring because it adjusts for urine concentration.",
      "pageTitle": "Urinalysis Test Guide | Dipstick, Microscopy, UTI, Kidney, Glucose, Protein, Blood, and Ketones",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2861,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should abnormal urinalysis results be urgent?",
      "answer": "Seek urgent guidance for fever, flank or back pain, pregnancy with UTI symptoms, visible blood, severe dehydration, vomiting, confusion, severe weakness, very high glucose or ketones in diabetes, or if a clinician flags the result as urgent.",
      "pageTitle": "Urinalysis Test Guide | Dipstick, Microscopy, UTI, Kidney, Glucose, Protein, Blood, and Ketones",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urinalysis-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urinalysis-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2862,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is a normal UACR?",
      "answer": "Many labs consider less than 30 mg/g to be in the normal or low range, but reference ranges can vary a little by lab. A result above 30 mg/g is generally considered higher than normal and should be interpreted in context, especially if it is not repeated.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Albumin-to-Creatinine Ratio (UACR) | Albuminuria, Kidney Disease, Diabetes, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2863,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why do I need to repeat a high UACR?",
      "answer": "Because UACR can be temporarily elevated by exercise, infection, fever, inflammation, dehydration, menstruation, and some medicines. Repeating the test helps show whether the albumin leak is persistent.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Albumin-to-Creatinine Ratio (UACR) | Albuminuria, Kidney Disease, Diabetes, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2864,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Is UACR the same as total urine protein?",
      "answer": "No. UACR focuses on albumin, while urine protein-to-creatinine ratio looks at total protein. They overlap, but they answer slightly different questions about kidney risk and protein loss.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Albumin-to-Creatinine Ratio (UACR) | Albuminuria, Kidney Disease, Diabetes, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2865,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can diabetes or high blood pressure raise the risk of abnormal UACR?",
      "answer": "Yes. Diabetes and high blood pressure are two of the most common reasons UACR is screened, because both can damage kidney filters before symptoms show up or eGFR falls.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Albumin-to-Creatinine Ratio (UACR) | Albuminuria, Kidney Disease, Diabetes, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2866,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can exercise or illness change UACR temporarily?",
      "answer": "Yes. Intense exercise, fever, recent illness, infection, dehydration, and sample contamination can all shift the result enough that repeat testing is needed before drawing a big conclusion.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Albumin-to-Creatinine Ratio (UACR) | Albuminuria, Kidney Disease, Diabetes, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2867,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests usually come after an abnormal UACR?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up includes eGFR, serum creatinine, urinalysis, blood pressure review, diabetes testing, and sometimes urine protein-to-creatinine ratio or nephrology evaluation if the abnormality persists.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Albumin-to-Creatinine Ratio (UACR) | Albuminuria, Kidney Disease, Diabetes, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-albumin-creatinine-ratio-uacr.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2868,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the difference between a urine culture and urinalysis?",
      "answer": "Urinalysis is a faster screening test that looks for clues like blood, leukocytes, nitrites, and protein. A culture tries to grow the organism and identify it more directly.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine culture test | bacteria, contamination, sensitivity, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2869,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What does mixed flora usually mean?",
      "answer": "It often means the sample was contaminated by skin or genital bacteria, so the result may be hard to interpret and a repeat sample may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine culture test | bacteria, contamination, sensitivity, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2870,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How long does a urine culture take?",
      "answer": "MedlinePlus says the lab usually needs about 24 to 48 hours for culture growth and identification, with susceptibility often added after that.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine culture test | bacteria, contamination, sensitivity, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2871,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why would a culture be ordered if I already started antibiotics?",
      "answer": "If the infection is complicated or symptoms are not improving, the culture can help explain whether the chosen antibiotic matches the organism.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine culture test | bacteria, contamination, sensitivity, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2872,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Is urine culture more important in pregnancy?",
      "answer": "Yes. ACOG treats UTI evaluation in pregnancy as especially important because follow-up and antibiotic selection can affect both parent and pregnancy.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine culture test | bacteria, contamination, sensitivity, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2873,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Should I worry about a negative culture if my symptoms are obvious?",
      "answer": "Not automatically. Timing, antibiotics before collection, contamination, or a different diagnosis can all change the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine culture test | bacteria, contamination, sensitivity, and follow-up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-culture-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-culture-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2874,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does UPCR measure?",
      "answer": "UPCR compares total urine protein with urine creatinine in a spot sample. It estimates overall protein loss without needing a 24-hour urine collection.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Protein-to-Creatinine Ratio | UPCR, Proteinuria, Kidney Disease, and UACR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2875,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is UPCR the same as UACR?",
      "answer": "No. UPCR measures total protein, while UACR focuses on albumin. They overlap but answer slightly different kidney questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Protein-to-Creatinine Ratio | UPCR, Proteinuria, Kidney Disease, and UACR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2876,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why is a spot urine sample useful?",
      "answer": "A spot sample is easier to collect than a timed 24-hour urine collection and can still give a useful estimate of protein loss, especially when paired with kidney context.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Protein-to-Creatinine Ratio | UPCR, Proteinuria, Kidney Disease, and UACR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2877,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can exercise or illness change UPCR?",
      "answer": "Yes. Exercise, fever, illness, dehydration, UTI, menstruation, and sample contamination can all change the result enough that repeat testing may be needed.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Protein-to-Creatinine Ratio | UPCR, Proteinuria, Kidney Disease, and UACR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2878,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What follow-up is common after a high UPCR?",
      "answer": "Common follow-up includes repeat UPCR, urinalysis, UACR, eGFR, creatinine, blood pressure review, diabetes review, and sometimes a timed urine collection or nephrology visit.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Protein-to-Creatinine Ratio | UPCR, Proteinuria, Kidney Disease, and UACR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2879,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should a result be repeated?",
      "answer": "If the result is unexpected, collected during illness, or not fitting the rest of the kidney picture, repeating it can help show whether proteinuria is persistent.",
      "pageTitle": "Urine Protein-to-Creatinine Ratio | UPCR, Proteinuria, Kidney Disease, and UACR",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/urine-protein-creatinine-ratio.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2880,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Will a UTI urine test show chlamydia or gonorrhea?",
      "answer": "Usually not. A routine UTI workup such as urinalysis or urine culture is different from an STI nucleic acid amplification test, or NAAT, for chlamydia or gonorrhea. Ask which tests were ordered by name.",
      "pageTitle": "UTI Test vs STI Test | Urinalysis, Urine Culture, and STI NAATs",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/uti-test-vs-sti-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/uti-test-vs-sti-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/uti-test-vs-sti-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2881,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can UTI and STI symptoms overlap?",
      "answer": "Yes. Burning with urination, pelvic discomfort, urinary urgency, discharge, and genital symptoms can overlap. Symptoms after sex, new partners, pregnancy, fever, flank pain, sores, or testicular pain should prompt clinician-directed testing and care.",
      "pageTitle": "UTI Test vs STI Test | Urinalysis, Urine Culture, and STI NAATs",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/uti-test-vs-sti-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/uti-test-vs-sti-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/uti-test-vs-sti-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2882,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is vaginal microbiome testing the same as BV testing?",
      "answer": "No. BV testing is a medical diagnostic pathway, while consumer vaginal microbiome testing usually describes organisms or community patterns and may not be standardized for treatment decisions.",
      "pageTitle": "Vaginal Microbiome Testing | BV, Yeast, STI Panels, and Consumer Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2883,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a vaginal microbiome report replace STI testing?",
      "answer": "No. STI testing is a separate question, especially after exposure, with new symptoms, or when a partner has symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Vaginal Microbiome Testing | BV, Yeast, STI Panels, and Consumer Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2884,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When should I seek medical care instead of retesting?",
      "answer": "Pelvic pain, fever, bleeding, pregnancy concerns, recurrent symptoms, or symptoms after a new partner are better handled with medical evaluation than a consumer report.",
      "pageTitle": "Vaginal Microbiome Testing | BV, Yeast, STI Panels, and Consumer Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2885,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does more Lactobacillus always mean better?",
      "answer": "Not always. Vaginal microbiology is context-dependent, and symptoms, pregnancy, STI risk, and recurrence history all matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Vaginal Microbiome Testing | BV, Yeast, STI Panels, and Consumer Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2886,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can I use a report to pick a treatment on my own?",
      "answer": "Not safely. A report may provide context, but treatment decisions should be based on the symptom pattern and a clinician’s exam or testing plan.",
      "pageTitle": "Vaginal Microbiome Testing | BV, Yeast, STI Panels, and Consumer Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2887,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When is pregnancy a reason to be more cautious?",
      "answer": "Pregnancy with symptoms, bleeding, leakage of fluid, or infection concern should be evaluated promptly because the stakes are higher than a wellness report.",
      "pageTitle": "Vaginal Microbiome Testing | BV, Yeast, STI Panels, and Consumer Reports",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vaginal-microbiome-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2888,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does VHL genetic testing look for?",
      "answer": "It looks for inherited pathogenic variants in the VHL gene that can explain a multisystem tumor syndrome affecting the brain, spine, retina, kidneys, adrenal glands, and pancreas.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL Genetic Testing | Hemangioblastomas, Kidney Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2889,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a VHL result come from tumor testing only?",
      "answer": "Yes. Tumor-only sequencing can show VHL changes, but that does not prove the change is inherited. Germline confirmation is needed if family risk is the question.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL Genetic Testing | Hemangioblastomas, Kidney Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2890,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out VHL?",
      "answer": "No. It can lower the chance, but it does not fully rule out VHL if the clinical pattern is strong or if deletion/duplication testing was missing.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL Genetic Testing | Hemangioblastomas, Kidney Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2891,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Which tumors most often point toward VHL?",
      "answer": "Retinal or CNS hemangioblastomas, early or multifocal clear cell kidney cancer, pheochromocytoma or paraganglioma, and some pancreatic lesions are classic clues.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL Genetic Testing | Hemangioblastomas, Kidney Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2892,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does deletion/duplication testing matter?",
      "answer": "Some clinically important VHL variants are larger than a simple sequence change, so a sequence-only test can miss them.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL Genetic Testing | Hemangioblastomas, Kidney Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2893,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why do family members need counseling?",
      "answer": "If the variant is germline, relatives may need targeted testing and organ-specific screening that starts before symptoms appear.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL Genetic Testing | Hemangioblastomas, Kidney Cancer, Pheochromocytoma, and Family Screening",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2894,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is the main difference between VHL and SDHx testing?",
      "answer": "VHL testing is usually looking for a broader multi-organ tumor syndrome that can include renal cell carcinoma, hemangioblastomas, pancreatic lesions, and pheochromocytoma. SDHx testing is usually focused on the paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma spectrum, especially tumor location, metastatic behavior, and family follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL vs SDHx paraganglioma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2895,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "When does VHL become more likely?",
      "answer": "VHL becomes more likely when the picture includes kidney cancer, CNS or retinal hemangioblastomas, pancreatic lesions, endolymphatic sac tumors, or pheochromocytoma with a family pattern that fits the syndrome.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL vs SDHx paraganglioma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2896,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When does SDHx become more likely?",
      "answer": "SDHx becomes more likely when the tumor pattern is a paraganglioma, especially if it is head-and-neck, thoracic, abdominal, or pelvic, or when the case raises concern for metastatic risk or a broader hereditary PPGL panel.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL vs SDHx paraganglioma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2897,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Does a negative result rule out hereditary PPGL?",
      "answer": "No. A negative VHL or SDHx result does not rule out hereditary PPGL. Other genes such as RET, NF1, TMEM127, MAX, and EPAS1 can still explain the pattern, and some families remain gene-negative on current testing.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL vs SDHx paraganglioma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2898,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Should relatives be tested if one gene is positive?",
      "answer": "If a pathogenic germline variant is confirmed, first-degree relatives are often offered targeted testing for the known family variant. If the result is only in tumor tissue or is a VUS, the family plan is different.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL vs SDHx paraganglioma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2899,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What follow-up tests matter after either result?",
      "answer": "Plasma or urine metanephrines, imaging, tumor pathology, and the family history still matter after either result. Genetics helps narrow the syndrome, but it does not replace the rest of the workup.",
      "pageTitle": "VHL vs SDHx paraganglioma genetic testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vhl-vs-sdhx-paraganglioma-genetic-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2900,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a Vibrio stool result always mean seafood exposure?",
      "answer": "No. Seafood is a common exposure, but saltwater, brackish water, or wound contact with coastal water can also matter.",
      "pageTitle": "Vibrio Stool Test | Seafood Exposure, Culture, PCR, and Severe Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2901,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why does culture confirmation matter after a CIDT?",
      "answer": "Culture can help with species-level identification, treatment decisions, and public-health follow-up.",
      "pageTitle": "Vibrio Stool Test | Seafood Exposure, Culture, PCR, and Severe Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2902,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "When is a wound infection an emergency?",
      "answer": "Rapidly worsening wound pain, swelling, blistering, fever, or sepsis symptoms should be treated urgently and should not wait for lab confirmation.",
      "pageTitle": "Vibrio Stool Test | Seafood Exposure, Culture, PCR, and Severe Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2903,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Who is at highest risk for severe Vibrio illness?",
      "answer": "People with liver disease, iron overload, diabetes, immune suppression, or other serious medical conditions are at higher risk for severe infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Vibrio Stool Test | Seafood Exposure, Culture, PCR, and Severe Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2904,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can Vibrio cause bloodstream infection?",
      "answer": "Yes. Severe cases can involve blood infection, especially when symptoms are severe or there is a wound exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "Vibrio Stool Test | Seafood Exposure, Culture, PCR, and Severe Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2905,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting the report?",
      "answer": "Ask whether the test identifies species, whether culture confirmation is needed, and whether wound or blood cultures are needed if symptoms are severe.",
      "pageTitle": "Vibrio Stool Test | Seafood Exposure, Culture, PCR, and Severe Risk",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vibrio-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2906,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Why are vitamin B12 and folate tested?",
      "answer": "They are often checked when symptoms or other tests suggest certain types of anemia, nerve symptoms, or vitamin deficiency.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin B12 and Folate Blood Test | Deficiency, Anemia, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2907,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can supplements affect vitamin B test results?",
      "answer": "Yes. Supplements, injections, fortified products, and some medicines can change interpretation, so they should be reported before testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin B12 and Folate Blood Test | Deficiency, Anemia, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2908,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why might methylmalonic acid be ordered?",
      "answer": "MMA can help clarify whether a low or borderline B12 result reflects true B12 deficiency.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin B12 and Folate Blood Test | Deficiency, Anemia, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2909,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why might homocysteine be ordered?",
      "answer": "Homocysteine can rise when B12 or folate status is low, so it can add context when the first result is unclear.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin B12 and Folate Blood Test | Deficiency, Anemia, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2910,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why does CBC context matter?",
      "answer": "B12 and folate problems often show up through anemia patterns, so CBC markers such as hemoglobin, MCV, and RDW help interpret the result.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin B12 and Folate Blood Test | Deficiency, Anemia, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2911,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Can folate mask a B12 problem?",
      "answer": "High folate intake can improve anemia while leaving B12-related nerve injury untreated, which is why both vitamins are considered together.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin B12 and Folate Blood Test | Deficiency, Anemia, and Results",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-b12-folate-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2912,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What vitamin D blood test is usually used?",
      "answer": "Most vitamin D status testing uses 25-hydroxyvitamin D, or 25(OH)D, because it reflects vitamin D from sun exposure, food, and supplements.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin D Blood Test Guide | 25(OH)D, Deficiency, Toxicity, Supplements, and Screening Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2913,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is routine vitamin D testing recommended for everyone?",
      "answer": "No. MedlinePlus says routine testing is not recommended for everyone, and USPSTF found insufficient evidence to assess screening benefits and harms in asymptomatic, community-dwelling, nonpregnant adults.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin D Blood Test Guide | 25(OH)D, Deficiency, Toxicity, Supplements, and Screening Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2914,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What is the difference between 25(OH)D and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D?",
      "answer": "25(OH)D is the main vitamin D status test. 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, or calcitriol, is the active hormone form and is usually reserved for narrower calcium, kidney, PTH, or rare disease questions.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin D Blood Test Guide | 25(OH)D, Deficiency, Toxicity, Supplements, and Screening Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2915,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can too much vitamin D be harmful?",
      "answer": "Yes. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes that excessive vitamin D intake can cause toxicity, often through high-dose supplements, and should be interpreted with calcium, kidney function, PTH, and dose history.",
      "pageTitle": "Vitamin D Blood Test Guide | 25(OH)D, Deficiency, Toxicity, Supplements, and Screening Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vitamin-d-blood-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2916,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What is VO2 max?",
      "answer": "VO2 max is the maximum rate at which your body can use oxygen during hard exercise. It is one of the best-known markers of cardiorespiratory fitness.",
      "pageTitle": "VO2 Max and Fitness Estimates | Wearables, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Lab Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2917,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a wearable VO2 max the same as lab VO2 max?",
      "answer": "No. Wearables estimate the number from sensors and algorithms, while lab testing measures oxygen and carbon dioxide directly during exercise.",
      "pageTitle": "VO2 Max and Fitness Estimates | Wearables, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Lab Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2918,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do different devices give different scores?",
      "answer": "Different algorithms, sensor quality, sport types, and assumptions about your heart-rate response can shift the number.",
      "pageTitle": "VO2 Max and Fitness Estimates | Wearables, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Lab Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2919,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What makes a wearable estimate less reliable?",
      "answer": "Heat, hills, treadmill use, poor heart-rate signal, illness, medication, dehydration, and changes in your exercise style can all distort the score.",
      "pageTitle": "VO2 Max and Fitness Estimates | Wearables, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Lab Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2920,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can I use the number to track progress?",
      "answer": "Yes, if you use the same device and treat it as a trend rather than a precise diagnostic value.",
      "pageTitle": "VO2 Max and Fitness Estimates | Wearables, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Lab Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2921,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "When should I get a real exercise test?",
      "answer": "If you have chest pain, unexplained shortness of breath, fainting, or a major change in exercise tolerance, a clinician-ordered test is more appropriate than a wearable estimate.",
      "pageTitle": "VO2 Max and Fitness Estimates | Wearables, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Lab Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/vo2-max-fitness-estimates.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2922,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does von Willebrand factor testing measure?",
      "answer": "It usually measures how much von Willebrand factor is present, how well it works, and whether factor VIII is also low.",
      "pageTitle": "von Willebrand Factor Testing | VWD, Bleeding, Platelet Function, Factor VIII, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2923,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might VWF testing need to be repeated?",
      "answer": "VWF results can shift with stress, pregnancy, or infection, so repeat testing may be needed before the diagnosis is clear.",
      "pageTitle": "von Willebrand Factor Testing | VWD, Bleeding, Platelet Function, Factor VIII, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2924,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Can normal screening tests rule out VWD?",
      "answer": "No. Screening tests can be normal in von Willebrand disease, especially milder forms, so more specific testing is often needed.",
      "pageTitle": "von Willebrand Factor Testing | VWD, Bleeding, Platelet Function, Factor VIII, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2925,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "What symptoms make clinicians think about VWF testing?",
      "answer": "Frequent nosebleeds, easy bruising, heavy menstrual bleeding, prolonged bleeding after dental work or surgery, and a family history of bleeding can all prompt testing.",
      "pageTitle": "von Willebrand Factor Testing | VWD, Bleeding, Platelet Function, Factor VIII, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2926,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Why is factor VIII part of the workup?",
      "answer": "Von Willebrand factor helps stabilize factor VIII, so low VWF can also leave factor VIII lower than expected.",
      "pageTitle": "von Willebrand Factor Testing | VWD, Bleeding, Platelet Function, Factor VIII, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2927,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What else may be checked with VWF tests?",
      "answer": "Clinicians may also order platelet count, platelet function analysis, PTT, VWF activity, and VWF multimer testing depending on the bleeding pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "von Willebrand Factor Testing | VWD, Bleeding, Platelet Function, Factor VIII, and Repeat Testing",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/von-willebrand-factor-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2928,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a smartwatch measure glucose without piercing the skin?",
      "answer": "Not in a way the FDA has authorized or approved for glucose monitoring. Treat that claim as unproven until the exact product and label are checked.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Glucose Monitoring Claims | Smartwatches, Rings, CGM, FDA Warnings, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2929,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a watch that shows CGM data the same as a glucose sensor?",
      "answer": "No. The sensor is the part under the skin. The watch or phone may just be a display.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Glucose Monitoring Claims | Smartwatches, Rings, CGM, FDA Warnings, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2930,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What should I do if my wearable reading does not match my symptoms?",
      "answer": "Use a validated blood glucose method or follow your diabetes care plan, especially if you have low- or high-glucose symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Glucose Monitoring Claims | Smartwatches, Rings, CGM, FDA Warnings, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2931,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Are CGMs only for people with diabetes?",
      "answer": "They are primarily used for diabetes care. In people without diabetes, they can be interesting feedback tools, but they are not a replacement for standard testing or medical interpretation.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Glucose Monitoring Claims | Smartwatches, Rings, CGM, FDA Warnings, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2932,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can these devices help people without diabetes?",
      "answer": "They may help some people notice eating or exercise patterns, but A1C and blood glucose testing are still the reference points when a real health question is on the table.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Glucose Monitoring Claims | Smartwatches, Rings, CGM, FDA Warnings, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2933,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "Why can inaccurate glucose readings be dangerous?",
      "answer": "Because they can prompt the wrong treatment move, including an insulin or sulfonylurea dose that lowers glucose too far.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Glucose Monitoring Claims | Smartwatches, Rings, CGM, FDA Warnings, and Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-glucose-monitoring-claims.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2934,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does HRV tell me whether I am healthy?",
      "answer": "Not by itself. HRV is one signal that can change with sleep, stress, illness, training, medications, and measurement timing.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Heart Rate Variability Guide | HRV trends, recovery scores, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2935,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can wearable HRV diagnose anxiety, dysautonomia, or heart disease?",
      "answer": "No. Those diagnoses depend on symptoms, history, exam findings, and clinical testing such as autonomic testing or cardiac evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Heart Rate Variability Guide | HRV trends, recovery scores, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2936,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do HRV numbers vary so much between devices?",
      "answer": "Devices may use different sensors, algorithms, sampling windows, and artifact handling, so the same person can get different values on different platforms.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Heart Rate Variability Guide | HRV trends, recovery scores, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2937,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is higher HRV always better?",
      "answer": "Not always. Context matters, and unusually high or low values can mean different things depending on age, training, illness, and measurement method.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Heart Rate Variability Guide | HRV trends, recovery scores, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2938,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if my HRV drops and I also feel sick?",
      "answer": "Treat the symptom picture as more important than the score. If you have fainting, chest pain, shortness of breath, palpitations, or severe dizziness, seek medical advice.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Heart Rate Variability Guide | HRV trends, recovery scores, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2939,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask before trusting a wearable HRV score?",
      "answer": "Ask what the device measures directly, how it handles motion and missing data, what it was validated against, and whether the company explains when the score should not be used.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Heart Rate Variability Guide | HRV trends, recovery scores, and limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-heart-rate-variability.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2940,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Is a wearable hydration sensor the same as a cystic fibrosis sweat test?",
      "answer": "No. A clinical sweat chloride test measures chloride in a collected sweat sample to help diagnose cystic fibrosis. A wearable is a consumer sensor that estimates hydration or sweat trends.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Hydration and Sweat Testing | Sweat Rate, Electrolytes, CF Sweat Chloride, and Accuracy Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2941,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a sweat wearable tell me if I am dehydrated?",
      "answer": "Not reliably on its own. Symptoms, heat exposure, fluid intake, body weight change, urine output, and sometimes blood or urine testing matter more.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Hydration and Sweat Testing | Sweat Rate, Electrolytes, CF Sweat Chloride, and Accuracy Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2942,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What do these devices usually measure?",
      "answer": "They may estimate sweat rate, sweat sodium, electrolyte loss, temperature, or hydration-related trends during exercise or heat exposure.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Hydration and Sweat Testing | Sweat Rate, Electrolytes, CF Sweat Chloride, and Accuracy Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2943,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Why do the numbers change from workout to workout?",
      "answer": "Sweat rate and composition change with heat, intensity, acclimatization, clothing, skin contamination, and the device algorithm itself.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Hydration and Sweat Testing | Sweat Rate, Electrolytes, CF Sweat Chloride, and Accuracy Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2944,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is the information most useful?",
      "answer": "It is most useful for athletes, outdoor workers, and people doing repeatable training where trends can help guide hydration planning.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Hydration and Sweat Testing | Sweat Rate, Electrolytes, CF Sweat Chloride, and Accuracy Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2945,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should make me ignore the score and get help?",
      "answer": "Confusion, fainting, chest pain, severe weakness, vomiting, very little urination, or worsening heat illness are reasons to stop and seek care.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Hydration and Sweat Testing | Sweat Rate, Electrolytes, CF Sweat Chloride, and Accuracy Limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-hydration-sweat-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2946,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Can a wearable pulse ox diagnose lung disease?",
      "answer": "No. It can show a trend or an alert, but diagnosis needs clinical context and often medical-grade testing.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Oxygen Saturation and Respiratory Rate | Pulse Ox, Skin Tone, and Accuracy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2947,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Why might a reading be wrong?",
      "answer": "Skin pigmentation, motion, cold hands, poor fit, and device design can all affect accuracy.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Oxygen Saturation and Respiratory Rate | Pulse Ox, Skin Tone, and Accuracy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2948,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "What should I do with a low alert?",
      "answer": "Repeat it at rest if appropriate, but do not delay care for concerning symptoms.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Oxygen Saturation and Respiratory Rate | Pulse Ox, Skin Tone, and Accuracy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2949,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can nighttime dips be normal?",
      "answer": "Sometimes brief changes happen, but repeated drops or symptoms may need a sleep or lung evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Oxygen Saturation and Respiratory Rate | Pulse Ox, Skin Tone, and Accuracy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2950,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When is a medical-grade test better?",
      "answer": "If the reading will change care, a validated pulse oximeter, sleep study, or other medical test is better.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Oxygen Saturation and Respiratory Rate | Pulse Ox, Skin Tone, and Accuracy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2951,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What symptoms should override the device?",
      "answer": "Shortness of breath, chest pain, bluish lips, confusion, fainting, or worsening respiratory symptoms should override the app.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Oxygen Saturation and Respiratory Rate | Pulse Ox, Skin Tone, and Accuracy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-oxygen-saturation-respiratory-rate.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2952,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "Does a wearable stress score tell me if I am mentally stressed?",
      "answer": "Not reliably. Wearables measure body signals that can change with stress, but those same signals also change with exercise, illness, caffeine, alcohol, sleep loss, and other factors.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Stress Scores | HRV, heart rate, EDA, cortisol, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2953,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a stress score diagnose anxiety or burnout?",
      "answer": "No. Anxiety, burnout, depression, and other mental-health concerns require symptom and context review, not a wearable score alone.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Stress Scores | HRV, heart rate, EDA, cortisol, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2954,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why do stress scores vary so much?",
      "answer": "The score may be driven by HRV, heart rate, breathing rate, sleep, movement, EDA, or algorithm choices, and each of those can change for many reasons.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Stress Scores | HRV, heart rate, EDA, cortisol, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2955,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Is cortisol the same thing as a wearable stress score?",
      "answer": "No. Cortisol is a lab measurement. A wearable stress score is an indirect estimate based on body signals, not a hormone test.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Stress Scores | HRV, heart rate, EDA, cortisol, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2956,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What should I do if the score is high but I feel fine?",
      "answer": "Use the trend as a prompt to look at sleep, workload, hydration, illness, caffeine, alcohol, and recovery. A score alone does not mean something is wrong.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Stress Scores | HRV, heart rate, EDA, cortisol, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2957,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I do if the score is low and I feel unwell?",
      "answer": "Prioritize symptoms. Chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, severe dizziness, confusion, or a new medical problem should be evaluated regardless of the wearable score.",
      "pageTitle": "Wearable Stress Scores | HRV, heart rate, EDA, cortisol, and accuracy limits",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/wearable-stress-scores.html#faq",
      "topic": "biomarkers",
      "topicName": "Emerging biometrics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2958,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a high white blood cell count mean?",
      "answer": "A high white blood cell count, often called leukocytosis, means there are more white blood cells in the blood than expected for that lab, age, and situation. It can happen with infection, inflammation, physical stress, smoking, pregnancy, medicines such as corticosteroids, and less commonly blood or bone marrow disorders. The CBC differential, symptoms, and trend matter more than the total number by itself.",
      "pageTitle": "High White Blood Cell Count | Leukocytosis, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes, Infection, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2959,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is a high WBC count always an infection?",
      "answer": "No. Infection is common, but high WBC results can also reflect inflammation, recent surgery or injury, intense stress, smoking, pregnancy, medication effects, allergic or parasitic patterns, autoimmune disease, or blood disorders. The type of white cell that is high helps narrow the possibilities.",
      "pageTitle": "High White Blood Cell Count | Leukocytosis, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes, Infection, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2960,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the CBC differential matter with high white blood cells?",
      "answer": "The differential shows which white blood cell types are driving the result, such as neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, or basophils. A neutrophil-predominant pattern is interpreted differently from lymphocytosis, eosinophilia, or basophilia, so the total WBC count is only a starting point.",
      "pageTitle": "High White Blood Cell Count | Leukocytosis, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes, Infection, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2961,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "When should a high white blood cell count be followed up quickly?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up is important when the result is very high, rising, persistent, paired with immature cells or blasts, or accompanied by concerning symptoms such as severe illness, trouble breathing, confusion, fainting, unexplained weight loss, night sweats, recurrent fevers, enlarged lymph nodes, easy bruising, or abnormal hemoglobin or platelets.",
      "pageTitle": "High White Blood Cell Count | Leukocytosis, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes, Infection, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2962,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can stress or steroids cause high white blood cells?",
      "answer": "Yes. Physical stress, recent surgery or injury, acute illness, smoking, pregnancy, and corticosteroid medicines can raise the white blood cell count, often through neutrophils. Those explanations still need to fit the full clinical picture and the repeat trend.",
      "pageTitle": "High White Blood Cell Count | Leukocytosis, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes, Infection, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2963,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after a high WBC result?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include a repeat CBC with differential, peripheral blood smear review, infection evaluation based on symptoms, inflammation markers, medication review, or hematology testing when the count is very high, persistent, unexplained, or accompanied by abnormal cells, anemia, or platelet changes.",
      "pageTitle": "High White Blood Cell Count | Leukocytosis, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes, Infection, Stress, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-high-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2964,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What does a low white blood cell count mean?",
      "answer": "A low white blood cell count, often called leukopenia, means the total number of white blood cells is below the lab's expected range. The next step is to see which white cell type is low, especially neutrophils or lymphocytes, and whether the result is new, persistent, mild, severe, isolated, or part of a broader CBC pattern.",
      "pageTitle": "Low White Blood Cell Count | Leukopenia, Neutropenia, Lymphopenia, ANC, Infection Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2965,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Is low WBC the same as neutropenia?",
      "answer": "Not always. Neutropenia means the neutrophil count is low. Because neutrophils are a major part of the WBC total, neutropenia is a common reason for leukopenia, but low lymphocytes or other white cell changes can also lower the total WBC.",
      "pageTitle": "Low White Blood Cell Count | Leukopenia, Neutropenia, Lymphopenia, ANC, Infection Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2966,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does the absolute neutrophil count matter?",
      "answer": "The absolute neutrophil count, or ANC, is more useful for infection-risk questions than the total WBC alone. Fever or signs of infection with significant neutropenia can require urgent medical guidance, especially in people receiving chemotherapy or immune-suppressing treatment.",
      "pageTitle": "Low White Blood Cell Count | Leukopenia, Neutropenia, Lymphopenia, ANC, Infection Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2967,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can medicines or viral illness cause low white blood cells?",
      "answer": "Yes. Low WBC patterns can occur with recent viral infections, chemotherapy or radiation, immune-suppressing medicines, some antibiotics or other drugs, autoimmune disease, HIV or other infections, nutritional deficiencies such as B12 or folate, alcohol-related marrow effects, and bone marrow disorders.",
      "pageTitle": "Low White Blood Cell Count | Leukopenia, Neutropenia, Lymphopenia, ANC, Infection Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2968,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "When should a low white blood cell count be followed up quickly?",
      "answer": "Prompt follow-up is important with fever, chills, severe sore throat, mouth sores, shortness of breath, confusion, severe weakness, recurrent or unusual infections, very low or falling counts, abnormal smear findings, or low hemoglobin or platelets along with the WBC result.",
      "pageTitle": "Low White Blood Cell Count | Leukopenia, Neutropenia, Lymphopenia, ANC, Infection Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2969,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What tests may be ordered after low WBC?",
      "answer": "Follow-up may include repeat CBC with differential, ANC review, peripheral smear, medication review, infection testing based on symptoms, B12, folate, copper, autoimmune or HIV testing when appropriate, and hematology review when counts are persistent, severe, unexplained, or paired with other abnormal blood-cell lines.",
      "pageTitle": "Low White Blood Cell Count | Leukopenia, Neutropenia, Lymphopenia, ANC, Infection Risk, and Follow-Up",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/white-blood-cell-count-low-interpretation.html#faq",
      "topic": "blood",
      "topicName": "Blood tests"
    },
    {
      "position": 2970,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "How is whole genome sequencing different from whole exome sequencing?",
      "answer": "WGS looks across nearly all of the DNA, while WES focuses on the protein-coding portion. WGS can see more, but more data does not always mean more certainty.",
      "pageTitle": "Whole genome sequencing reports | variants, VUS, and privacy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2971,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "What is a VUS?",
      "answer": "A VUS is a variant of uncertain significance. It is a real change in the DNA, but the lab does not yet know whether it is related to disease.",
      "pageTitle": "Whole genome sequencing reports | variants, VUS, and privacy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2972,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Should a VUS change treatment or surgery plans?",
      "answer": "Usually not by itself. A VUS is meant to be revisited in clinical context, and it may be reclassified later.",
      "pageTitle": "Whole genome sequencing reports | variants, VUS, and privacy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2973,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Can I assume a negative report rules out genetic disease?",
      "answer": "No. No sequencing report catches everything, and some conditions involve variant types or regions that a given assay may miss.",
      "pageTitle": "Whole genome sequencing reports | variants, VUS, and privacy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2974,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "Can I ask for reanalysis later?",
      "answer": "Often yes, but the policy depends on the lab. Reanalysis can matter because variant interpretation changes as databases and research improve.",
      "pageTitle": "Whole genome sequencing reports | variants, VUS, and privacy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2975,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What privacy issue should I think about first?",
      "answer": "Think about who stores your raw data, who can share it, and what happens if you upload it to a third-party service. Genetic data can matter for your relatives as well as you.",
      "pageTitle": "Whole genome sequencing reports | variants, VUS, and privacy",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/whole-genome-sequencing-reports.html#faq",
      "topic": "genetics",
      "topicName": "Genetics"
    },
    {
      "position": 2976,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "What test is usually ordered for Yersinia?",
      "answer": "A stool culture or a multiplex GI PCR panel may be used, and the lab may need a specific Yersinia request.",
      "pageTitle": "Yersinia Stool Test | Culture, PCR Panels, CIN Agar, and Pseudoappendicitis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2977,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can a routine stool culture miss Yersinia?",
      "answer": "Yes. The lab may need special culture conditions or a specific request to improve recovery.",
      "pageTitle": "Yersinia Stool Test | Culture, PCR Panels, CIN Agar, and Pseudoappendicitis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2978,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "Why does Yersinia matter for appendicitis-like pain?",
      "answer": "Yersinia can mimic pseudoappendicitis with right-sided abdominal pain, fever, and diarrhea.",
      "pageTitle": "Yersinia Stool Test | Culture, PCR Panels, CIN Agar, and Pseudoappendicitis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2979,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 4,
      "question": "Who is at higher risk for severe Yersinia disease?",
      "answer": "People with iron overload, hemochromatosis, thalassemia, or immune compromise can have more severe infection.",
      "pageTitle": "Yersinia Stool Test | Culture, PCR Panels, CIN Agar, and Pseudoappendicitis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2980,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 5,
      "question": "What if stool testing is negative?",
      "answer": "A negative result does not always rule it out if the lab method was not optimized or symptoms fit strongly.",
      "pageTitle": "Yersinia Stool Test | Culture, PCR Panels, CIN Agar, and Pseudoappendicitis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2981,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 6,
      "question": "What should I ask the lab?",
      "answer": "Ask whether Yersinia was specifically requested, how the sample was processed, and whether culture or PCR was used.",
      "pageTitle": "Yersinia Stool Test | Culture, PCR Panels, CIN Agar, and Pseudoappendicitis",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "pagePath": "/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/articles/yersinia-stool-test.html#faq",
      "topic": "microbiome",
      "topicName": "Microbiome and stool testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2982,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 1,
      "question": "When should STI testing be urgent instead of routine?",
      "answer": "STI testing becomes urgent when there may be a need for HIV PEP within 72 hours, emergency contraception, sexual-assault care, severe pelvic or testicular pain, pregnancy-related follow-up, or symptoms that need prompt clinical evaluation.",
      "pageTitle": "STI and STD Testing Guide | Who Should Test, Where to Go, and What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/topics/sti-std-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/topics/sti-std-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/topics/sti-std-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2983,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 2,
      "question": "Can one STI test answer every exposure question?",
      "answer": "No. STI testing depends on infection, timing, specimen type, body site, symptoms, partner results, pregnancy possibility, and whether follow-up or treatment is needed. Urine, swab, blood, and lesion tests answer different questions.",
      "pageTitle": "STI and STD Testing Guide | Who Should Test, Where to Go, and What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/topics/sti-std-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/topics/sti-std-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/topics/sti-std-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    },
    {
      "position": 2984,
      "pageQuestionPosition": 3,
      "question": "How does Lab Intel handle very narrow exposure questions?",
      "answer": "Lab Intel prioritizes broader, source-backed guides for exposure types, body sites, symptoms, and timing. Highly specific variants are consolidated or deferred until they can be reviewed for source quality, duplication risk, and reader safety.",
      "pageTitle": "STI and STD Testing Guide | Who Should Test, Where to Go, and What to Ask",
      "pageUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/topics/sti-std-testing.html",
      "pagePath": "/topics/sti-std-testing.html",
      "faqUrl": "https://mainstreetbloodlab.com/topics/sti-std-testing.html#faq",
      "topic": "sti",
      "topicName": "STI and STD testing"
    }
  ]
}
