BloodTrack for Thyroid Health

Master Your Thyroid Health with Comprehensive Tracking

Monitor TSH, T3, T4, and antibodies to optimize your thyroid function and medication.

Sound Familiar?

These are common challenges that proper blood test tracking can help you overcome.

1

TSH in "normal" range but still feeling symptoms

2

Difficulty finding optimal medication dose

3

Not testing the full thyroid panel

4

Symptoms dismissed without proper testing

5

Autoimmune thyroid not being monitored

Built for Thyroid Health

BloodTrack provides specialized features designed for your specific health needs.

Full Panel Tracking

Go beyond TSH to see the complete thyroid picture.

Medication Correlation

Track how dosage changes affect your markers over time.

Symptom Logging

Correlate symptoms with lab values for better insights.

Why Track Your Blood Tests?

Spot trends early

Catch negative changes before they become problems.

Measure interventions

See how diet, exercise, and supplements affect your markers.

Optimize treatment

Share clear data with your healthcare provider for better decisions.

Take control

Transform confusing lab results into actionable insights.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about blood testing for thyroid health.

Why do I need more than just a TSH test?

TSH alone misses many thyroid problems. You can have normal TSH with poor T4 to T3 conversion, elevated antibodies indicating autoimmune disease, or symptoms despite "normal" TSH. A full panel includes TSH, Free T4, Free T3, and antibodies.

What is the optimal TSH range?

While labs often use 0.4-4.5 as the reference range, many thyroid specialists aim for TSH between 0.5-2.0 for optimal symptom relief, especially in patients on medication. Individual optimal ranges vary.

How often should I test my thyroid on medication?

After starting or changing medication, test every 6-8 weeks until stable. Once optimal, testing every 3-6 months maintains good control. Test sooner if symptoms change.

What do thyroid antibodies indicate?

Elevated TPO or thyroglobulin antibodies indicate autoimmune thyroid disease (Hashimotos). Even with normal thyroid function, antibodies can predict future hypothyroidism and should be monitored.

Start Tracking Your Thyroid

Join thousands of users who track their blood markers with BloodTrack. Upload your results in seconds and get insights that matter.