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Inflammation Test Kit

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$39.95

What is it ?

It is a urine test to measure levels of inflammation in the body

Why take the Resona Health Inflammation test?

Inflammation is the underlying cause of many ailments. By conducting this simple test before starting therapy, and then again after 30 days or so, it can be a good biomarker for improvement.

The results determine how much oxidative stress is occurring in your body. Damage to cell membranes or other lipids generates aldehydes (malondialdehyde), generally caused by free radicals induced by stress, environmental chemicals, as well as cell metabolism.

Instructions

It’s easy.

1 – As soon as the kit arrives, remove the 2 glass vials and place them in your freezer until you are ready to take the pre-test. Leave the 2nd vial in the freezer until you’re ready to take the post-test. Remove the pipettes and instruction card and place them in a safe place you will remember.

2 – Collect urine in any cup and use the pipette to extract some urine. Fill the vial half way full.

3 – Wait 3 minutes

4 – Match the color with the provided color chart and note your score to 2 significant digits (2.1, 3.4, etc.) Don’t worry about being exact, you are just trying to compare before and after. Record the score for comparison later with the post-test.

Interpretation

The established scale is 0 through 4. A score of 0 is deemed normal, 2 is low Malondialdehyde, 3 is moderate Malondialdehyde, and 4 is considered high Malondialdehyde. If you are taking B Vitamins, your urine will have a yellow tint.

What does the test quantify?

This test measures lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde) in the urine which is directly proportional to the amount of oxidized fat. The more malondialdehyde in the urine, the greater the amount of peroxidation. The test is used as an at-home semi-quantitative lipid peroxidation test. There is a subjective element because the interpretation is based on a perception of color concentration. The more malondialdehyde in the urine, the darker the color will be.

___

Scientific Background

For an in depth scientific explanation of how this test was developed, please review this report:

Inflammation Test Research 

 

Description

What is it ?

It is a urine test to measure levels of inflammation in the body

Why take the Resona Health Inflammation test?

Inflammation is the underlying cause of many ailments. By conducting this simple test before starting therapy, and then again after 30 days or so, it can be a good biomarker for improvement.

The results determine how much oxidative stress is occurring in your body. Damage to cell membranes or other lipids generates aldehydes (malondialdehyde), generally caused by free radicals induced by stress, environmental chemicals, as well as cell metabolism.

Instructions

It’s easy.

1 – As soon as the kit arrives, remove the 2 glass vials and place them in your freezer until you are ready to take the pre-test. Leave the 2nd vial in the freezer until you’re ready to take the post-test. Remove the pipettes and instruction card and place them in a safe place you will remember.

2 – Collect urine in any cup and use the pipette to extract some urine. Fill the vial half way full.

3 – Wait 3 minutes

4 – Match the color with the provided color chart and note your score to 2 significant digits (2.1, 3.4, etc.) Don’t worry about being exact, you are just trying to compare before and after. Record the score for comparison later with the post-test.

Interpretation

The established scale is 0 through 4. A score of 0 is deemed normal, 2 is low Malondialdehyde, 3 is moderate Malondialdehyde, and 4 is considered high Malondialdehyde. If you are taking B Vitamins, your urine will have a yellow tint.

What does the test quantify?

This test measures lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde) in the urine which is directly proportional to the amount of oxidized fat. The more malondialdehyde in the urine, the greater the amount of peroxidation. The test is used as an at-home semi-quantitative lipid peroxidation test. There is a subjective element because the interpretation is based on a perception of color concentration. The more malondialdehyde in the urine, the darker the color will be.

Scientific Background

For an in depth scientific explanation of how this test was developed, please review this report:

Inflammation Test Research 

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