Longitudinal lab organization

Lab result tracker for chronic illness

Keep test names, values, units, reference ranges, dates, ordering context, symptoms, and treatment changes together so you can review the trend—not just one isolated result.

Organization only · A clinician must interpret results in your medical context

Preserve the details needed to interpret a result

The result

  • Test and panel name
  • Value, unit, and reference range
  • Collection date and time
  • Laboratory or source

The context

  • Fasting or non-fasting status
  • Illness, hydration, exercise, or cycle timing
  • Current medications and supplements
  • Reason the test was ordered

The follow-up

  • Clinician interpretation
  • Repeat-test plan
  • Treatment or dosage changes
  • Questions that remain open
Reference ranges differ. A flagged or unflagged value does not determine its clinical meaning by itself. Units, laboratory method, trends, symptoms, and individual context matter.

Review a trend without losing the source

Keep the original report available and avoid converting values without documenting the conversion. When methods or ranges change, label that change rather than treating every point as directly comparable.

Exact: preserve value and unit
Sourced: keep report and collection date
Comparable: note range or method changes
Connected: add symptoms and treatment context

Lab tracking questions

Does “normal” mean a result cannot matter?

No single label answers that question. Clinicians interpret results using symptoms, history, trends, test characteristics, and other findings.

Should results from different labs be combined?

They can be organized together, but differences in units, reference ranges, and methods should remain visible. Ask a clinician before drawing comparisons.

Can Mito Map diagnose a condition from my labs?

No. Mito Map helps organize information and questions; it does not diagnose or replace professional interpretation.

Turn scattered reports into a reviewable timeline.

Connect lab results with symptoms, treatment changes, and follow-up questions.

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