Heavy Metals & Environmental Toxins - Comprehensive Lab Panel
The Heavy Metals & Environmental Toxins Comprehensive Lab Panel includes 34 tests and 136 biomarkers to support broad review of heavy metal exposure, environmental toxin burden, kidney function, liver processing, inflammation, mineral balance, antioxidant status, and nutrient support. It includes blood and urine heavy metals, aluminum, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, manganese, nickel, thallium, beryllium, CMP, CBC, cystatin C, urinalysis, GGT, bilirubin, PT/INR, glutathione, selenium.
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The following is a list of what is included in the item above. Click the test(s) below to view what biomarkers are measured along with an explanation of what the biomarker is measuring.
Also known as: Microalbumin Random Urine with Creatinine
Creatinine, Random Urine
Microalbumin
Microalbumin/Creatinine
Aluminum
Beryllium
Also known as: Bilirubin Fractionated
Bilirubin, Direct
Bilirubin, Indirect
Bilirubin, Total
Also known as: Cadmium Blood
Cadmium, Blood
Also known as: CBC, CBC includes Differential and Platelets, CBC/PLT w/DIFF, Complete Blood Count (includes Differential and Platelets)
NOTE: Ulta Lab Tests provides CBC test results from Quest Diagnostics as they are reported. Often, different biomarker results are made available at different time intervals. When reporting the results, Ulta Lab Tests denotes those biomarkers not yet reported as 'pending' for every biomarker the test might report. Only biomarkers Quest Diagnostics observes are incorporated and represented in the final CBC test results provided by Ulta Lab Tests.
Absolute Band Neutrophils (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Basophils
Absolute Blasts (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Eosinophils
Absolute Lymphocytes
Absolute Metamyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Monocytes
Absolute Myelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Neutrophils
Absolute Nucleated Rbc (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Promyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Band Neutrophils (Only Reported If Detected)
Basophils
Blasts (Only Reported If Detected)
Eosinophils
Hematocrit
Hemoglobin
Lymphocytes
MCH
MCHC
MCV
Metamyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Monocytes
MPV
Myelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Neutrophils
Nucleated Rbc (Only Reported If Detected)
Platelet Count
Promyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
RDW
Reactive Lymphocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Red Blood Cell Count
White Blood Cell Count
Also known as: Chromium Blood
Chromium, Blood
Also known as: Cobalt Blood
Cobalt, Blood
Also known as: Chem 12, Chemistry Panel, Chemistry Screen, CMP, Complete Metabolic Panel, Comprehensive Metabolic Panel CMP, SMA 12, SMA 20
Albumin
Albumin/Globulin Ratio
Alkaline Phosphatase
Alt
AST
Bilirubin, Total
Bun/Creatinine Ratio
Calcium
Carbon Dioxide
Chloride
Creatinine
Egfr African American
Egfr Non-Afr. American
GFR-AFRICAN AMERICAN
GFR-NON AFRICAN AMERICAN
Globulin
Glucose
Potassium
Protein, Total
Sodium
Urea Nitrogen (Bun)
Copper
CYSTATIN C
eGFR
Ferritin
Also known as: Gamma Glutamyl Transferase GGT, Gamma-Glutamyl Transferase, Gamma-Glutamyl Transpeptidase, Gamma-GT, GGTP, GTP
Ggt
Also known as: Heavy Metals Panel with Cadmium Random Urine
Arsenic, Random Urine
Cadmium, Random Urine
Creatinine, Random Urine
Lead, Random Urine
Mercury, Random Urine
Also known as: Heavy Metals Panel Blood
Arsenic, Blood
Lead, Blood
Mercury, Blood
Also known as: Homocysteine, Homocysteine Cardiovascular
HOMOCYSTEINE,
Also known as: C-Reactive Protein, Cardio CRP, Cardio hs-CRP, CRP, High Sensitivity CRP, High-sensitivity C-reactive Protein, High-sensitivity CRP, Highly Sensitive CRP, hsCRP, Ultra-sensitive CRP
Hs Crp
Also known as: Iron and TIBC, Iron and Total Iron Binding Capacity TIBC, TIBC
% Saturation
Iron Binding Capacity
Iron, Total
Magnesium
Also known as: Manganese Blood
Manganese, Blood
Methylmalonic Acid
Also known as: Nickel SerumPlasma
Nickel, Serum/Plasma
ARACHIDONIC ACID
ARACHIDONIC ACID/EPA
DHA
DPA
EPA
EPA+DPA+DHA
LINOLEIC ACID
OMEGA-3 TOTAL
OMEGA-6 TOTAL
OMEGA-6/OMEGA-3 RATIO
Also known as: Protein Total Random Urine with Creatini
Creatinine, Random Urine
Protein, Total, Random Ur
Protein/Creatinine Ratio
Also known as: Pro Time with INR, Prothrombin Time and International Normalized Ratio, Prothrombin Time PT with INR, Prothrombin Time with INR, Protime with INR, PT
Inr
Pt
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D2
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D3
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, Total
Also known as: ESR, SED RATE, Sed Rate by Modified Westergren ESR
Sed Rate By Modified
Selenium
Also known as: Thallium Blood
Thallium, Blood
Also known as: UA, Complete, Urinalysis UA Complete, Urine Analysis, Complete
Amorphous Sediment (Only Reported If Detected)
Appearance
Bacteria
Bilirubin
Calcium Oxalate Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Casts (Only Reported If Detected)
Color
Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Glucose
Granular Cast (Only Reported If Detected)
Hyaline Cast
Ketones
Leukocyte Esterase
Nitrite
Occult Blood
Ph
Protein
Rbc
Reducing Substances (Only Reported If Detected)
Renal Epithelial Cells (Only Reported If Detected)
Specific Gravity
Squamous Epithelial Cells
Transitional Epithelial (Only Reported If Detected)
Triple Phosphate Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Uric Acid Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
WBC
YEAST (Only Reported If Detected)
Also known as: B12, B12 Vitamin, Cobalamin, Cyanocobalamin, Vitamin B12 Cobalamin
Vitamin B12
Also known as: B6, B6 Vitamin, Pyridoxal, Pyridoxal Phosphate, Pyridoxal Phosphate (PLP), Vitamin B6 Pyridoxal Phosphate
Vitamin B6
Also known as: ZN, Plasma
Zinc
The Heavy Metals & Environmental Toxins - Comprehensive Lab Panel panel contains 34 tests with 138 biomarkers .
Overview
The Heavy Metals & Environmental Toxins Comprehensive Lab Panel is designed for people who want a broad lab-based review of selected heavy metals, environmental toxin exposure markers, kidney function, liver processing, inflammation, mineral balance, antioxidant status, and nutrient support.
Heavy metals and environmental toxins may come from many sources, including contaminated food or water, older homes, occupational exposure, industrial materials, smoke, pigments, batteries, welding, metal implants, imported supplements, detox products, hobbies, and environmental pollution.
This panel combines blood and urine exposure testing with key health-support markers that help evaluate how the body may be responding. It does not diagnose toxicity by itself. Results should be reviewed with a licensed healthcare provider and interpreted with symptoms, exposure history, occupation, diet, supplement use, medications, and collection timing.
Why Order This Panel?
The Heavy Metals & Environmental Toxins Comprehensive Lab Panel may be helpful for people who want a deeper review of possible exposure patterns and related health markers.
This panel may help provide insight into:
- Heavy metal exposure markers in blood and urine
- Common and expanded toxic metal patterns
- Kidney filtration and urine protein patterns
- Liver function, bile flow, and bilirubin processing
- Blood count and anemia-related patterns
- Iron status and mineral balance
- Low-grade and systemic inflammation
- Antioxidant status through total glutathione
- B-vitamin and methylation-related markers
- Omega fatty acid and inflammation-support status
- Nutrient markers that may be relevant to detoxification-support discussions
This Panel May Be Helpful For People With
- Concern about heavy metal exposure
- Occupational or industrial exposure
- Older home renovation exposure
- Well water or environmental exposure concerns
- High seafood intake or arsenic/mercury concerns
- Imported supplement or detox product use
- Welding, metal work, batteries, pigments, ceramics, shooting range, or manufacturing exposure
- Metal implant concerns
- Fatigue, brain fog, nerve symptoms, or unexplained symptoms requiring provider review
- Kidney, liver, inflammation, or mineral-balance concerns
- Interest in a broad environmental wellness baseline
What This Panel Helps Evaluate
This panel helps evaluate selected biomarkers related to:
- Blood-based heavy metal exposure
- Urine-based heavy metal exposure
- Expanded environmental and occupational metals
- Kidney filtration
- Urine protein and albumin patterns
- Liver processing and bile flow
- Liver synthetic/clotting function
- Blood count and anemia-related patterns
- Iron storage and iron availability
- Inflammation
- Antioxidant status
- Zinc, copper, selenium, and magnesium balance
- Vitamin B12, methylmalonic acid, homocysteine, and vitamin B6 status
- Omega fatty acid status
- General environmental toxin support
Tests Included and Why They Matter
Heavy Metals & Environmental Exposure Markers
This group directly evaluates selected heavy metals and environmental metals. Blood testing may provide context for recent or ongoing exposure, while urine testing may provide context for excretion patterns. The best specimen type can vary by metal, timing, exposure source, and clinical question.
Heavy Metals Panel with Cadmium, Random Urine
This urine panel is included because it provides a broad starting point for evaluating selected heavy metals through urine. It may include metals such as arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury, depending on the laboratory configuration.
Urine testing may help provide exposure and excretion context, especially when reviewed with symptoms, exposure history, kidney markers, and collection preparation. Seafood intake can affect arsenic interpretation, so customers should follow collection instructions carefully.
Heavy Metals Panel, Blood
This blood panel is included because blood testing can provide important context for certain heavy metals, especially recent or ongoing exposure. Blood-based testing may be especially useful when evaluating lead, mercury, arsenic, or other metals depending on the panel configuration.
Blood and urine testing together can provide a broader exposure picture than either specimen type alone.
Aluminum
Aluminum testing is included as an expanded environmental metal marker. Aluminum exposure may be reviewed in selected contexts such as occupational exposure, industrial exposure, certain products, antacid use, or specialty clinical concerns.
This test is best interpreted with exposure history, kidney function, medications, supplements, and provider guidance.
Beryllium
Beryllium is included because it may be relevant to occupational or industrial exposure, including aerospace, manufacturing, electronics, metal work, machining, and related environments.
This is not a routine consumer exposure marker for everyone, but it adds value in a comprehensive environmental toxins panel for people with occupational or specialty exposure concerns.
Cadmium, Blood
Cadmium blood testing is included because cadmium exposure may occur through smoking, industrial work, batteries, pigments, contaminated food, environmental exposure, or certain occupational settings.
Cadmium is especially relevant because kidney effects are an important concern with some exposure patterns. This test should be interpreted with urine metals, kidney markers, smoking history, occupation, and exposure timing.
Chromium, Blood
Chromium blood testing is included because chromium exposure may be relevant in welding, metal work, industrial settings, pigments, alloys, and some implant-related concerns.
This marker can be useful when exposure history suggests chromium risk or when a provider wants blood-based context for occupational or environmental exposure.
Cobalt, Blood
Cobalt blood testing is included because cobalt exposure may be relevant with metal-on-metal implants, industrial exposure, metal work, pigments, batteries, or occupational settings.
Cobalt should be interpreted with symptoms, implant history, occupation, kidney function, and other metal markers.
Manganese, Blood
Manganese blood testing is included because manganese exposure may occur in welding, mining, manufacturing, environmental settings, or certain occupational situations.
This test adds value in a comprehensive panel for people with industrial or occupational exposure concerns, especially when neurologic symptoms or exposure history are being reviewed.
Nickel, Serum/Plasma
Nickel testing is included because nickel exposure may be relevant in metal alloys, plating, batteries, industrial work, implants, jewelry-related exposure, or occupational environments.
This marker is most useful when interpreted with exposure history and provider guidance.
Thallium, Blood
Thallium testing is included as a specialty toxic metal marker. Thallium exposure is uncommon but may be relevant in certain environmental, occupational, or unusual exposure situations.
Including thallium strengthens the panel for customers seeking a broad environmental toxins review.
Kidney Filtration, Urine Protein & Exposure-Safety Context
The kidneys help filter blood and remove many substances from the body. Several metals and environmental exposures can be relevant to kidney health, so this group helps evaluate filtration, urine findings, and early kidney stress patterns.
Comprehensive Metabolic Panel, CMP
The CMP evaluates kidney function, liver function, glucose, electrolytes, calcium, albumin, total protein, and metabolic health markers.
This test is included because heavy metal and toxin concerns should be reviewed alongside core organ function. CMP kidney and liver markers provide an important safety baseline for interpreting exposure-related findings.
Cystatin C with eGFR
Cystatin C with eGFR provides an additional estimate of kidney filtration. It is included because cystatin C may provide kidney function context beyond creatinine alone.
This is useful in environmental toxin testing because kidney filtration is important for interpreting exposure, excretion, and potential kidney stress patterns.
Albumin, Random Urine with Creatinine
This urine test evaluates albumin relative to creatinine. It is included because urine albumin may provide early kidney and vascular stress context.
In a heavy metals and toxins panel, this marker helps evaluate whether kidney-related changes may be present alongside exposure findings.
Protein, Total, Random Urine with Creatinine
This test evaluates total urine protein relative to creatinine. It is included because it provides broader urine protein-loss context beyond albumin alone.
This is a strong kidney-safety addition for a comprehensive environmental toxins panel because some kidney concerns may involve broader protein patterns.
Urinalysis, UA, Complete
A complete urinalysis evaluates urine findings such as protein, blood, glucose, ketones, specific gravity, pH, and other markers.
This test is included because urinalysis may provide hydration, kidney, urinary, glucose-handling, and protein/blood-in-urine context. It helps make the panel more useful for evaluating possible exposure-related kidney or urinary patterns.
Liver Processing, Bile Flow & Clotting Function
The liver helps process nutrients, medications, alcohol, supplements, and environmental exposures. This group provides liver enzyme, bile flow, bilirubin, and clotting-function context.
Gamma Glutamyl Transferase, GGT
GGT is a liver and bile duct enzyme. It is included because GGT may provide context for liver stress, bile flow, alcohol exposure, fatty liver patterns, medications, supplements, and environmental toxin concerns.
GGT adds value because CMP liver markers alone may not fully reflect bile-flow or detoxification-support context.
Bilirubin, Fractionated
Bilirubin, Fractionated measures total, direct, and indirect bilirubin. This test is included because bilirubin patterns can provide more detailed context for liver processing, bile flow, red blood cell breakdown, and bilirubin metabolism.
It is stronger than direct bilirubin alone because it provides a more complete bilirubin picture.
Prothrombin Time, PT with INR
PT/INR evaluates clotting time and may provide liver synthetic function context. It is included because the liver produces several clotting factors.
In a comprehensive toxin-support panel, PT/INR adds a higher-level liver function marker beyond enzymes alone.
Blood Health, Iron Status & Inflammation
Environmental exposures may overlap with anemia patterns, inflammatory findings, immune changes, fatigue, and iron-related issues. This group helps evaluate blood count, iron storage, iron availability, and inflammation.
CBC, includes Differential and Platelets
The CBC evaluates red blood cells, white blood cells, hemoglobin, hematocrit, platelets, and white blood cell types.
This test is included because blood count patterns may provide context for anemia, immune activity, inflammation, infection clues, platelet changes, fatigue, and general wellness. It is a foundational marker when reviewing possible environmental exposure concerns.
Ferritin
Ferritin measures stored iron. It is included because ferritin may provide context for iron status, anemia-related patterns, inflammation, liver/metabolic patterns, and fatigue.
Ferritin can be low with iron deficiency or elevated with inflammation, liver stress, metabolic factors, or iron overload patterns. It should be reviewed with iron/TIBC and inflammation markers.
Iron and Total Iron Binding Capacity, TIBC
Iron and TIBC help evaluate circulating iron and iron transport capacity. This test is included because iron availability may provide context for anemia, fatigue, oxygen delivery, inflammation, and mineral balance.
Iron status is useful in environmental toxin panels because blood health and fatigue symptoms often overlap with exposure concerns.
hs-CRP
High-sensitivity C-reactive protein is a marker of low-grade inflammation. It is included because inflammation may provide useful context for environmental exposure concerns, cardiometabolic risk, liver/metabolic patterns, and general wellness.
hs-CRP is nonspecific, so it should be interpreted with symptoms, exposure history, CBC, ferritin, ESR, and other findings.
Sed Rate by Modified Westergren, ESR
ESR is a broad inflammation marker. It is included because it provides another inflammation perspective that complements hs-CRP.
In a comprehensive toxin panel, ESR may be useful when symptoms include fatigue, pain, systemic inflammation concerns, or unexplained wellness changes.
Minerals, Antioxidants & Detoxification-Support Context
This group evaluates minerals and antioxidant markers that may be relevant when discussing exposure, oxidative stress, immune function, neurologic wellness, and detoxification-support pathways. These tests do not prove detoxification capacity, but they help provide context for provider-guided wellness review.
Zinc
Zinc is an essential mineral involved in immune function, wound healing, antioxidant pathways, enzyme activity, hormone pathways, and tissue repair.
This test is included because zinc status may be relevant to immune resilience, antioxidant support, skin health, and mineral balance. Zinc and copper should often be reviewed together because high zinc intake may affect copper balance.
Copper
Copper is involved in iron metabolism, connective tissue health, nervous system function, mitochondrial enzymes, and antioxidant pathways.
This test is included because copper status may provide useful mineral-balance context, especially when reviewed with zinc, ferritin, iron/TIBC, and neurologic or fatigue symptoms.
Selenium
Selenium is an essential mineral involved in antioxidant enzymes and thyroid-related pathways.
This test is included because selenium may provide useful context for antioxidant support, thyroid wellness, immune function, and mercury-related exposure discussions.
Magnesium
Magnesium supports muscle function, nerve signaling, glucose metabolism, blood pressure regulation, detoxification-support discussions, and general metabolic wellness.
This test is included because magnesium status may provide context for fatigue, muscle symptoms, stress, neurologic symptoms, and supplement safety.
Total Glutathione
Glutathione is an important antioxidant involved in cellular redox balance and detoxification-support pathways.
This test is included because glutathione status may provide insight into antioxidant reserve and oxidative stress context. It should not be used to claim that the body is or is not “detoxing,” but it can add useful provider-guided antioxidant context.
OMEGACHECK™
OMEGACHECK™ evaluates omega fatty acid status. It is included because omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acid patterns may provide context for inflammation balance, cardiovascular wellness, nutrition quality, and cell membrane health.
This is a premium wellness marker that supports the environmental toxin panel by adding inflammation and nutrition context.
B Vitamins, Methylation & Neurologic Support
Some environmental exposure concerns overlap with neurologic symptoms, fatigue, methylation pathways, and B-vitamin status. This group helps evaluate functional B-vitamin markers that may be useful in a broad toxin-support review.
Vitamin B12, Cobalamin
Vitamin B12 supports red blood cell production, nerve function, DNA synthesis, methylation, and neurologic wellness.
This test is included because B12 status may provide context for fatigue, numbness, tingling, weakness, brain fog, restricted diets, and neurologic symptoms that may overlap with exposure concerns.
Methylmalonic Acid
Methylmalonic acid, or MMA, is a functional marker related to vitamin B12 status. It is included because MMA may provide deeper B12 interpretation than serum B12 alone.
This is useful when B12 is borderline or when symptoms include fatigue, neuropathy-like symptoms, numbness, tingling, weakness, or brain fog.
Homocysteine
Homocysteine is influenced by vitamin B12, folate, vitamin B6, methylation pathways, kidney function, and vascular health.
This test is included because it helps provide functional context for B-vitamin status, methylation, vascular wellness, and neurologic-support discussions.
Vitamin B6, Pyridoxal Phosphate
Vitamin B6 is involved in neurotransmitter pathways, methylation, amino acid metabolism, immune function, and nervous system health.
This test is included because B6 status may be relevant to neurologic symptoms, supplement use, methylation support, and energy metabolism.
Vitamin D, Immune & General Wellness Support
QuestAssureD™ 25-Hydroxyvitamin D, D2, D3, LC/MS/MS
Vitamin D testing measures vitamin D status. This test is included because vitamin D may be relevant to immune function, inflammation balance, bone health, muscle function, and general wellness.
In an environmental toxins panel, vitamin D helps provide broader immune and wellness context when symptoms such as fatigue, aches, or low resilience are being reviewed.
Reflex / Follow-Up Recommendation
Arsenic Speciation if Urine Arsenic Is Elevated
If urine arsenic is elevated, arsenic speciation may be recommended as follow-up testing. This helps distinguish organic arsenic, often related to recent seafood intake, from more concerning inorganic arsenic exposure patterns.
Customers should follow collection instructions carefully and may be advised to avoid seafood before urine arsenic testing if directed by the laboratory or provider.
Related Biomarker Patterns This Panel May Help Identify
This panel may help identify or rule out lab patterns related to:
- Blood-based heavy metal exposure
- Urine-based heavy metal exposure
- Occupational or environmental metal exposure
- Kidney filtration changes
- Urine protein or albumin abnormalities
- Liver enzyme, bile flow, or bilirubin pattern changes
- Liver synthetic or clotting function changes
- Anemia or blood count abnormalities
- Iron deficiency, iron overload, or inflammation-related ferritin changes
- Low-grade or broad inflammation patterns
- Zinc, copper, selenium, or magnesium status
- Glutathione and antioxidant context
- B12, MMA, homocysteine, and B6 patterns
- Omega fatty acid status
- Vitamin D status
- General environmental toxin support patterns
How to Prepare for This Panel
Preparation may vary depending on the specific tests and specimen types included. In general:
- Follow all blood and urine collection instructions carefully.
- Avoid seafood before arsenic-related urine testing if instructed, because seafood may affect arsenic interpretation.
- Bring a list of possible exposures, including occupation, hobbies, home renovation, water source, supplements, imported products, smoking history, seafood intake, metal implants, and environmental concerns.
- Bring a list of medications, supplements, detox products, vitamins, minerals, and doses.
- Do not stop prescribed medications unless your healthcare provider tells you to.
- Drink water normally before testing unless instructed otherwise.
- Do not overhydrate before urine testing.
- Follow all laboratory preparation instructions provided with your order.
What Happens After You Receive Your Results?
After your results are available, your biomarkers can help organize findings into areas such as blood heavy metals, urine heavy metals, expanded environmental metals, kidney filtration, urine protein patterns, liver function, bile flow, inflammation, blood count, iron status, mineral balance, antioxidant status, B-vitamin function, omega fatty acid status, and vitamin D.
A licensed healthcare provider can help interpret your results in the context of exposure timing, symptoms, occupation, diet, supplement use, medical history, and whether follow-up testing such as arsenic speciation may be appropriate.
Important Note
This panel is designed to help evaluate selected biomarkers related to heavy metals, environmental toxin exposure, kidney function, liver function, inflammation, mineral balance, antioxidant status, nutrient support, and general wellness. It is not intended to diagnose poisoning, toxicity, environmental illness, or any disease by itself. Results should be reviewed with a licensed healthcare provider.