Academy · Essentials · Module 5
Module 5 of 6
Module 5 · Pet Longevity Essentials

Diagnostics & monitoring.

What you don't measure, you can't improve. This module gives you the working knowledge to read your animal's basic blood panel, ask better questions of your vet, and decide which advanced markers are worth the cost — and which aren't.

P
Manuel Riegner · with Dr. Sarah Vogt, DVM
Vet-reviewed · estimated 80 minutes

What's in this module

  1. The annual longevity panel · what to ask for
  2. Reading a basic blood panel yourself
  3. Beyond blood · imaging, biomarkers, novel tests
  4. Testing rhythm by age and species
  5. Module 5 reflection
5.1

The annual longevity panel.

15 min · reference

Standard "wellness panels" your vet runs by default are usually a basic CBC and limited chemistry. Sufficient to catch acute issues; not sufficient for healthspan tracking. The panel we recommend annually for any animal over 5:

Total cost typically CHF 180–280 for the full panel. Plus members get this protocol included in care planning.

Takeaways

  • Default "wellness panels" undertest by design — they're built for sick-care, not healthspan.
  • Adding SDMA, CRP/SAA and proper urinalysis transforms the picture.
  • The full panel is affordable — the gap is mostly that owners don't know to ask.

5.2

Reading a basic blood panel yourself.

25 min · skill

You will not become a veterinarian by reading a blood panel. You will become a much better partner to your vet. The goal of this lesson is pattern recognition and asking smart follow-up questions.

Three patterns to learn:

Pattern A · The "everything in range, but trending" picture

Each value within reference range — but creatinine drifting upward year over year, or ALP creeping up. This is the longevity-relevant pattern most basic vet visits miss. Trends matter more than single values.

Pattern B · The mild-but-multiple anomaly picture

Small flags across several markers, none individually concerning. CBC slightly off. CRP mildly elevated. Mild proteinuria. Pattern suggests low-grade systemic inflammation that needs investigation, not "everything's fine."

Pattern C · The single big flag

One value substantially out of range. Usually obvious. The work here is the differential diagnosis with your vet.

The key skill: save panels and trend them. A spreadsheet, the PETVITY dashboard, even a simple notebook. Year over year, you'll see things a single annual visit can't.

Takeaways

  • Trends > single values for healthspan tracking.
  • Three patterns: trending-in-range, mild-multiple, single-big-flag.
  • The saved-panel-spreadsheet habit transforms how informative annual visits are.

5.3

Beyond blood · imaging, biomarkers, novel tests.

15 min · landscape

Increasingly available, increasingly worth knowing about:

What we still consider speculative or not worth routine cost: full genome sequencing (interesting, not yet actionable for most pets), most "wellness DNA" panels (oversold), continuous glucose monitors (niche use cases only).

Takeaways

  • Beyond-blood diagnostics are arriving fast — be selective.
  • Highest-value: epigenetic age (longitudinal), cardiac biomarkers (predisposed breeds), early imaging baselines.
  • Lowest-value (currently): genome screening, generic wellness DNA, most allergy panels as screening.

5.4

Testing rhythm.

10 min · cadence

Recommended cadence by age:

Takeaways

  • Cadence scales with age — more frequent over 7.
  • Test before/after substantial interventions — otherwise you can't tell what worked.

5.5

Module 5 reflection.

5 min
  1. When was your animal's last full panel? Did it include SDMA + inflammation markers + urinalysis?
  2. Do you have past panels saved in a way you can compare year over year?
  3. Looking at age and species, what's the right testing cadence for your animal — and are you on it?
  4. What's one diagnostic you've been "meaning to do" that this module makes more concrete?

Continue to Module 6

Module 6: Building rituals that last — the synthesis. How to take everything from Modules 1–5 and turn it into a daily, weekly, seasonal practice that compounds.

Continue to Module 6 →