
At-Home Metal Toxicity Test
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At-Home Heavy Metal Toxicity Test
In Stock • Free Shipping

In Stock • Free Shipping
The Lab Me At Home Metal Toxicity Test uses ICP-MS, the gold standard for element analysis, which allows for high specificity and sensitivity into the parts-per-trillion.
Exposure to dangerous heavy metals or insufficiency of nutritional elements affects health profoundly. Testing elements in the most appropriate sample type is important for proper assessment. The Lab Me at-home metal toxicity test is an excellent way to detect dangerous exposure.
Results are delivered 5-7 days after the lab receives your sample. It includes licensed M.D. recommendations via PDF format using HIPAA and SOK2 compliant encryption. For all Lab Me premium tests, you are able to contact our medical team with any questions you may have about your results for no extra charge.
Note: This is not a diagnostic test and cannot confirm any specific illness or disease. Further testing and medical consultation may be required to determine the cause of abnormal results.
What is included?
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Arsenic (As)
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Bromine (Br)
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Cadmium (Cd)
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Copper (Cu)
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Iodine (I)
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Lithium (Li)
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Magnesium (Mg)
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Mercury (Hg)
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Selenium (Se)
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Zinc (Zn)
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Zn:Cu Ratio
Collection Method
Who Should Consider Taking This At-Home Metal Toxicity Test?
Getting too much, and sometimes too little, of various elements has consequences for our overall health. Who should consider heavy metals and essential elements testing? Anyone who:
Smokes
Has exposure to private well water or aging pipes
Is concerned about heavy metals in foods like vegetables, rice, and seafood
Has mercury dental work
Lives in an older home or near an industrial area
Has thyroid-related health issues
The At Home Metal Toxicity Test Is Encouraged If You Are:
- A smoker
- Hobbies that expose you to heavy metals
- Have or have had mercury dental fillings
- Have health issues that could be a result of nutritional deficiencies
- Imbalances of essential elements
- Work in a factory that uses heavy metals
- Breathe in old lead paint dust when you fix up your home
- Eat fish caught in an area with high levels of mercury
- Use herbal medicines that have heavy metals in them
- Use dinnerware that hasn’t been coated well enough to prevent heavy metals from contaminating food
- Drink water contaminated with heavy metal.
Creatinine is measured in all samples to correct results for urine dilution
Arsenic (As) – <42 µg/g creatinine* (Urine) N/A (Blood)
Bromine (Br) – 700-4800 µg/g creatinine* (Urine) N/A (Blood)
Cadmium (Cd) – <0.72 µg/g creatinine* (Urine) <0.75 µg/L (Blood)
Copper (Cu) – N/A (Urine) 0.64-1.10 mg/L (Blood)
Iodine (I) – 100-380 µg/g creatinine* (Urine) N/A (Blood)
Lithium (Li) – 10-218 µg/g creatinine* (Urine) N/A (Blood)
Magnesium (Mg) – N/A (Urine) 29-51 mg/L (Blood)
Mercury (Hg) – <1.58 µg/g creatinine* (Urine) <6.98 µg/L (Blood)
Selenium (Se) – 34-220 µg/g creatinine* Optimum 50-175 (Urine) 130-362 µg/L (Blood)
Zinc (Zn) – N/A (Urine) 5.06-8.57 mg/L (Blood)
Zn:Cu Ratio – N/A (Urine) 6.16-10.30 (Blood)
Chronic Toxicity
You get this after contact with a low dose over a long time. As the metal builds up in your body, you can get sick. Symptoms come on slowly and can include:
- Headache
- Weakness and tiredness
- Achy joints and muscles
- Constipation
Drinking water with lead in it can lead to cognitive problems and slower development in kids. Infants who drink formula mixed with tap water are at especially high risk if their drinking water is contaminated.
Lead has been banned from plumbing for years, but it still gets into the water supply from old lines. Some water filters will remove it from your water, but if you’re concerned about the level of lead in your drinking supply, you can request a water test.
Heavy Metal Poisoning Diagnosis
Different tests can check for different types of heavy metals. Some might test your blood or pee. Others might require an X-ray. These tests can help your doctor decide if you have heavy metal poisoning, how severe it is, and which heavy metals are involved. They include:
- The Lab Me at-home metal toxicity test
- CBC (complete blood count)
- Kidney function tests
- Testing for proteins in the urine
- Liver function tests
- Imaging tests (abdominal radiographs)
- Electrocardiogram
We are all exposed to different amounts of essential and toxic elements depending on where we live, our diet and supplementation routine, and environmental pollution of the air we breathe. Essential elements are only conducive to optimal health when they are within optimal ranges – levels that are too low or too high can have detrimental effects on health – and exposure to toxic heavy metals has multiple adverse health effects.
This comprehensive profile allows a complete assessment of the most important elements implicated in health-related effects, as it includes a measure of both short and long term exposure to all 4 of the most toxic environmental heavy metals, as well as highlighting nutritional element deficiencies earlier than a typical serum test.
How to collect your at home metal toxicity test sample.
The Lab Me at-home heavy metals and essential elements health test uses both urine and blood in order to best detect issues.
The slides beside give an overview of both however you can download the instructions below.
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Lab Me Works

01
Get Your Lab Me Kit
Order online and choose how often you’d like a test. We’ll mail your kit and it’ll be in your hands within only a few days.

02
Perform Your Test
Your kit contains everything you need to test from home. When you’re done, use the pre-paid envelope to send it back

03
Rapid, Accurate Results
Once we receive the test and process it, the results will be on your dashboard within 48 hours.
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