man in black tank top and white cap holding black and gray dumbbell
— Men's Clinical Pathway

Your numbers tell a story. We read it.

Declining testosterone, stubborn body fat, and low energy are measurable. InBody scans and comprehensive labs show exactly where your system is underperforming — before any protocol begins.

Close-up medium shot of a male patient and a clinician reviewing an InBody body composition printout together at a clinical desk, soft natural window light from the left, organized clinical space visible in background, documentary style
Close-up medium shot of a male patient and a clinician reviewing an InBody body composition printout together at a clinical desk, soft natural window light from the left, organized clinical space visible in background, documentary style
/ Diagnostic-First Assessment

Measurable decline has measurable causes

Low testosterone, metabolic dysfunction, and unfavorable body composition don't appear without reason. Biomarker analysis and InBody screening identify the specific deficits driving your symptoms.

We quantify lean mass, visceral fat, hormonal status, and metabolic markers before prescribing anything. The data shapes the protocol — not the other way around.

Prescriber-Led Interventions

Three clinical pillars, one coordinated plan

Diagnostics and Body Composition

Peptides and GLP-1 Therapy

Functional Medicine Root-Cause Work

InBody scan plus comprehensive labs establish your baseline — testosterone, metabolic panel, and key hormonal markers — so every decision is grounded in your actual data.

Peptide protocols and GLP-1 medications are prescribed to your specific biomarker profile. Dosing is clinician-supervised and adjusted as your labs change — never a static handout.

Functional medicine maps the systemic reasons your hormones and metabolism shifted. The protocol targets root mechanisms, not just the symptom that brought you in.

Start with data. Build from there.

A men's health consultation begins with a full diagnostic intake — InBody screening, labs, and a clinical review. No assumptions. No generic protocols.