Your Walsh Protocol Biotype Screening Summary

Your questionnaire responses have been analyzed for symptom patterns commonly associated with biochemical profiles described in the Walsh Protocol.

This screening is based on questionnaire responses only and is intended to identify possible biochemical tendencies that may influence mood, cognition, behavior, sleep, and neurological function. It does not establish a medical diagnosis.

Screening results are not available.

What This Means

Your responses suggest symptom patterns that may be consistent with one or more Walsh biotypes. These patterns may reflect biochemical tendencies involving methylation balance, copper regulation, or pyrrole-related nutrient depletion.

Because this screening is based on symptoms alone, laboratory testing and clinical review may be needed to confirm whether these biochemical patterns are present.

Discuss Your Screening Results With Dr. Epstein

A brief screening consultation with Dr. David Epstein, D.O. can help determine whether further evaluation is appropriate and which laboratory testing may be most useful.

During this discussion, questionnaire results can be reviewed and matched with possible next steps such as:

    • Comprehensive Biotype Panel

    • Plasma Methylation Panel

    • review of existing laboratory results

A brief screening call can help determine whether laboratory testing or further evaluation may be appropriate.

*A brief screening consultation typically takes 10–15 minutes.

Laboratory Testing Used in Walsh Protocol Assessments

This screening tool evaluates symptom patterns that may be associated with biochemical tendencies described in the Walsh Protocol. R Physician evaluation, preferably with laboratory testing, is required to confirm biochemical findings.

Comprehensive Biotype Panel:

Evaluates biochemical markers associated with Walsh biotypes including zinc status, copper balance, vitamin levels, and related metabolic patterns.

Plasma Methylation Panel

Provides a detailed assessment of methylation metabolism including markers such as SAM, SAH, methionine, and related intermediates.

Next Step

If your screening results suggest a possible biochemical imbalance, a brief consultation with Dr. David Epstein can help determine whether laboratory testing or further evaluation may be appropriate.