Bonner Natural Health
Integrative & Functional Wellness

Lab Review for Eddie Hunt

Labs drawn June 8, 2026  ·  Reviewed June 17, 2026
Patient
Eddie A. Hunt
DOB / Age
8/30/1958 · 67
MRN
000650461
Ordering Physician
Barry Holdampf, MD

Eddie,

I've gone through the full set of labs from your June 8th draw, and I wanted to put my thoughts in writing so you have them to read at your own pace and bring to our next visit. Overall there is a lot of good news here, your kidneys, liver, electrolytes, thyroid, and blood proteins all look healthy, and several of the numbers reflect that your prostate cancer treatment is doing its job.

Below I've summarized what stands out, what it means in the context of your diagnosis, and the few areas where I'd like us to put our attention over the coming months.

What's Working in Your Favor

Encouraging

PSA is low

Your PSA is under 1.0 ng/mL. In the setting of prostate cancer treatment, a low PSA is exactly what we want to see, it points to good disease control.

Encouraging

Testosterone is well suppressed

Total testosterone of 17 and free of 2.0 are very low, and that is the intended effect of hormone (androgen-deprivation) therapy. It tells us the therapy is working as designed.

Normal

Organ function is solid

Kidney (eGFR 87), liver enzymes, and electrolytes are all within range, reassuring while you're on treatment.

Normal

Thyroid is balanced

TSH of 2.55 sits comfortably in the normal range.

Understanding Your Hormone & PSA Numbers

Treatment-Related Markers
TestResultReferenceReading
PSA, Total<1.0 ng/mL0.0–4.0Reassuring
Testosterone, Total17 ng/dL264–916*On target for therapy
Testosterone, Free2.0 pg/mL6.6–18.1*On target for therapy

*The printed reference ranges are for healthy younger men who are not on hormone therapy. While you're being treated, the goal is to keep testosterone very low, so a result that the lab flags as "low" is actually the target. For that reason, raising your testosterone is not something we'd pursue right now; instead, we focus on managing the side effects of keeping it low.

Where I'd Like Us to Focus

Keeping testosterone low is the right strategy for the cancer, but it has predictable ripple effects on metabolism, blood counts, and bone. The next few items are common companions of hormone therapy, and the encouraging part is that they respond well to the kind of nutrition, movement, and monitoring we can put in place together.

Metabolic & Blood-Count Findings
TestResultReferenceFlag
Total Cholesterol210 mg/dL≤199High
LDL (Direct)146 mg/dL<100 optimalHigh
Non-HDL Cholesterol149 mg/dL<130 optimalHigh
HDL ("good") Cholesterol61 mg/dL≥40Good
Triglycerides76 mg/dL0–149Good
Hemoglobin A1C5.7 %3.0–5.6Borderline
Fasting Glucose113 mg/dL79–99High
Hemoglobin13.7 g/dL14.0–18.0Mildly low
Platelets89 K/uL150–400Low
In context

Cholesterol & blood sugar

By standard cutoffs your cholesterol (210, LDL 146), A1C (5.7%), and glucose (113) read high, but on your ketogenic, lectin-free program, and with strong HDL (61) and low triglycerides (76), this is often a perfectly acceptable pattern. I’m reading these in that dietary context, not as a problem to fix.

Focus

Bone health

Lowered testosterone gradually thins bone over time. This is worth getting ahead of with vitamin D, calcium, and weight-bearing exercise.

Monitor

Low platelets

Your platelet count of 89 is below range. This can accompany cancer treatment, but I'd like to recheck it to confirm the value and watch the trend.

Monitor

Mild anemia

Hemoglobin of 13.7 is slightly low and is a frequent, usually manageable companion of hormone therapy. We'll keep an eye on it alongside your platelets.

My Recommendations for You

Because you’re following Dr. Gundry’s ketogenic, lectin-free approach, I’m reading your cholesterol in that light, a total of 210 alongside strong HDL (61) and low triglycerides (76) is a pattern many people hold comfortably on this kind of program, so I’m not concerned about it in isolation and wouldn’t change your eating to chase the LDL number. My priorities are elsewhere: first, protecting your bones, since keeping testosterone low gradually thins bone, let’s make sure you’re covered on vitamin D and calcium, keep up weight-bearing and resistance movement. Second, let’s recheck your blood count over the next few weeks to confirm the low platelets and mild anemia and watch their trend, with a few simple follow-up tests (iron, B12, folate) if they stay low. I’ll also interpret your A1C (5.7%) and fasting glucose (113) in the context of your ketogenic diet, where a mildly higher fasting glucose is often a normal physiological response rather than a warning sign. We’ll plan to run other labs in three months to confirm you’re holding steady.

The short version: your treatment markers look right where we want them, PSA low and testosterone well suppressed, and your major organs are healthy. The areas I want us to work on (cholesterol, blood sugar, bone strength, and your blood counts) are the expected side of hormone therapy, and they're the parts most responsive to the lifestyle and monitoring plan above. None of this is cause for alarm; it's a roadmap.

I'm glad to walk through any of this with you in more detail whenever you'd like. You're doing the right things by staying on top of your monitoring.

Warm regards,

Barry Bonner

Bonner Natural Health · Integrative & Functional Wellness

This letter is an educational summary of your laboratory results, intended to support, not replace, care from your treating physicians. Reference ranges shown are those reported by SMC Hospital Lab and LabCorp on this panel; the testosterone ranges are for men not on hormone therapy. Please continue all treatment as directed and reach out with any new or worsening symptoms.
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