The Science Behind Your Recovery Epigenetic Landscape

Epigenetic patterns reflect how lifestyle choices influence gene expression without changing DNA

Epigenetics refers to modifications to DNA that affect gene expression without altering the underlying genetic sequence. These modifications, such as DNA methylation, act as switches that can turn genes on or off, influencing sleep quality, stress resilience, and recovery capacity. Unlike your genetic code, which remains relatively static throughout life, your epigenetic patterns are dynamic and responsive to environment, lifestyle, nutrition, and aging.

Unlike static genetic code, your epigenome is dynamic and responsive to environmentThis test examines 25 markers across essential sleep and stress systemsMethylation analysis reveals biological patterns invisible to standard assessmentsYour results create a personalised blueprint for targeted recovery optimisation

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Understanding Epigenetics and Recovery

How your lifestyle choices influence gene expression without changing DNA—and why this matters

What Are Epigenetics?

Epigenetics refers to modifications to DNA that affect gene expression without altering the underlying genetic sequence. These modifications, such as DNA methylation, act as switches that can turn genes on or off, influencing sleep quality, stress resilience, and recovery capacity.

Unlike your genetic code, which remains relatively static throughout life, your epigenetic patterns are dynamic and responsive to environment, lifestyle, nutrition, and aging.

Key Insight

The epigenome—the complete set of epigenetic modifications in your DNA—plays a crucial role in numerous cognitive processes.

The Epigenome's Role in Biological Systems

The epigenome plays a crucial role in numerous physiological processes:

  • Sleep Architecture & Quality: These methylation patterns reveal how your body naturally regulates sleep stages, deep sleep generation, and overall sleep satisfaction—foundational elements that determine your restorative capacity and how effectively your body repairs itself during rest.
  • Sleep Timing & Continuity: Your epigenetic markers show how your body's natural clock functions, affecting your ideal sleep window, optimal sleep duration, and sleep maintenance ability—critical factors that determine whether you function best as a night owl, morning lark, or somewhere in between.
  • Sleep Movement & Disruption: These methylation sites govern jittery legs risk, overall sleep movement patterns, and micro-awakening tendencies—revealing why some people experience restless sleep despite ideal sleep environments and explaining disruptions conventional sleep tracking might miss.
  • Sleep-Substance Interactions: Your epigenetic patterns influence how your body metabolises caffeine, produces melatonin, and responds to factors that may trigger sleeplessness—explaining why certain substances or activities might disrupt your sleep when they don't affect others.
  • Stress Response & Resilience: These methylation sites govern your HPA axis function, cortisol regulation, and recovery capacity—revealing why your body's physiological response to pressure might be dramatically different from someone else's.
  • Emotional Balance: Your epigenetic patterns influence anxiety propensity, depression tendency, and thought patterns—critical factors that connect your psychological state to sleep quality and physical recovery.
  • Hormonal Function: These methylation markers affect thyroid function, DHEA production, and stress hormone cycles—essential regulatory systems that orchestrate energy, metabolism, and recovery throughout your 24-hour cycle.
  • Nutrient Processing & Utilisation: Your epigenetic sites reveal how efficiently your body processes B-vitamins, activates vitamin D, and utilises nutrients critical for sleep regulation—explaining why standardised nutritional recommendations may not support your unique recovery needs.
  • Electrolyte & Mineral Sensitivity: These methylation patterns govern sodium sensitivity, potassium processing, and magnesium utilisation—essential mineral pathways that affect nervous system function, muscle relaxation, and sleep quality.
  • Detoxification Pathways: Your epigenetic markers influence glutathione production, NRF2 activity, methylation efficiency, and choline metabolism—cellular protection systems that shield your body from both environmental compounds and internal stress byproducts.
  • Inflammatory & Immune Balance: These methylation patterns control inflammatory signalling, IL-10 production, mast cell activity, and cellular protection mechanisms—potentially explaining why certain foods, environments, or stressors trigger systemic responses that disrupt both sleep and recovery.
  • Physical Stress Manifestations: Your epigenetic patterns influence teeth grinding, TMJ sensitivity, and how psychological stress expresses physically—creating clear connections between mind and body that guide targeted intervention strategies.

Epigenetics and  Cellular Vitality Research

Research increasingly demonstrates that epigenetic patterns are closely linked to sleep quality and stress resilience, with specific methylation signatures associated with circadian function, stress adaptation, and recovery capacity. By analysing these patterns, we can gain unprecedented insights into your recovery profile and potential optimisation pathways.

Biological Age Clocks

Epigenetic clocks use methylation patterns to predict biological age with remarkable accuracy, often revealing significant differences from chronological age.

Lifestyle Responsiveness

Studies show epigenetic patterns respond rapidly to lifestyle changes, making them powerful tools for monitoring health interventions.

Disease Prediction

Specific methylation signatures can predict susceptibility to age-related diseases years before symptoms appear.

Why This Matters for Your Health

Understanding your epigenetic patterns provides:

  • Recovery-specific insights: This specialised 25-marker analysis reveals epigenetic regulation patterns that specifically influence sleep quality and stress resilience—beyond basic health markers.
  • Personalised precision: Your recovery epigenetic patterns help explain why generic sleep and stress approaches may yield different results for you than others.
  • Actionable specificity: By identifying specific methylation patterns, we can pinpoint precise lifestyle, nutritional, and environmental interventions most likely to support your unique recovery profile.
  • Longitudinal tracking: Establishing your baseline sleep and stress epigenetic profile allows you to monitor changes over time as you implement lifestyle modifications—creating a feedback loop for continuous optimisation.

Comprehensive Epigenetic Analysis

While standard assessments only measure current symptoms, our analysis examines a diverse array of methylation sites associated with key aspects of sleep quality and stress resilience across 25 specialised recovery markers:

Sleep Architecture & Quality +

Understanding your sleep structure can help identify opportunities for enhancing rest, recovery, and daily performance.

  • Deep sleep quality: Methylation patterns in genes that regulate slow-wave sleep generation—the most physically restorative sleep phase linked to memory consolidation, immune function, and cellular repair. Our analysis examines specific CpG sites associated with key sleep regulatory genes, including those affecting GABA receptor function and growth hormone release during deep sleep phases.
  • Reported sleep quality: Epigenetic markers influencing the subjective perception of sleep quality and restoration, which research shows can differ significantly from objective measurements. These patterns may explain why some individuals consistently feel unrested despite sufficient sleep duration and normal sleep architecture on conventional sleep studies.
  • Excessive sleepiness risk: Methylation sites associated with orexin/hypocretin signalling, adenosine processing, and other wakefulness-promoting systems—potentially explaining persistent daytime fatigue despite adequate sleep quantity. These markers provide insights into the biological mechanisms affecting alertness that go beyond conventional sleep quantity metrics.

Sleep Timing & Continuity +

These insights reveal how your circadian biology, sleep duration needs, and sleep maintenance capacity are influenced by epigenetic factors—giving you specific areas to target for optimisation.

  • Ideal sleep window: Methylation patterns in genes that regulate circadian timing and chronotype, including CLOCK, PER, CRY, and BMAL1 regulatory regions—potentially explaining individual variations in peak sleepiness, alertness, and optimal timing for cognitive and physical performance. These patterns go beyond conventional chronotype assessments to provide deeper insights into your body's natural rhythms.
  • Ideal total time in bed: Epigenetic markers affecting natural sleep duration requirements—revealing why standard eight-hour recommendations might not be optimal for your biology, with specific sites linked to variations in sleep need ranging from 6 to 9+ hours for optimal functioning. These patterns help explain why some individuals naturally require longer or shorter sleep periods for optimal daytime function.
  • Sleep deprivation sensitivity: Methylation sites associated with neurological resilience to sleep loss—examining patterns that influence cognitive performance, emotional regulation, and metabolic function during periods of reduced sleep. These markers help explain why some individuals maintain relatively high function with limited sleep while others experience significant impairment.
  • Micro-awakening propensity: Epigenetic patterns influencing brief arousals during sleep—often occurring without conscious awareness but significantly impacting overall sleep quality and restoration. These markers examine methylation in genes affecting sleep stability, arousal threshold, and transitions between sleep stages.

Sleep Movement & Disruption +

Discover whether your sleep disruptions stem from specific movement patterns or nervous system activation—and how to build better sleep continuity tailored to your unique profile.

  • Jittery legs risk: Methylation patterns in genes affecting dopamine signalling, iron metabolism, and nervous system excitability that may contribute to periodic limb movements and restless sensations during sleep. These markers examine biological factors beyond conventional diagnoses, offering insights into why some individuals experience increased limb movements during rest.
  • Sleep movement risk: Epigenetic sites influencing general body movement during sleep, including patterns affecting muscle tone maintenance during REM sleep and movement threshold during non-REM phases. These patterns help explain why some individuals naturally experience more physical restlessness throughout the night despite good sleep hygiene.
  • Sleep continuity factors: Methylation markers associated with the ability to maintain uninterrupted sleep cycles, focusing on transition points between sleep stages and arousal threshold. These sites reveal biological patterns affecting how easily your sleep is disrupted and your ability to maintain sleep architecture throughout the night.

Sleep-Substance Interactions +

These insights help you understand how your body uniquely processes compounds that affect sleep quality—and how to optimise your approach accordingly.

  • Caffeine effects on sleep: Methylation patterns affecting adenosine receptor sensitivity, neurotransmitter balance, and arousal systems in response to caffeine—potentially explaining individual variations in how caffeine disrupts sleep architecture, sleep onset, and sleep maintenance. These markers go beyond simple caffeine metabolism to examine how your brain specifically responds to caffeine's effects.
  • Caffeine metabolism (CYP1A2): Epigenetic sites influencing the expression and activity of the primary enzyme responsible for caffeine clearance in the liver. Methylation patterns in the CYP1A2 gene region help explain why caffeine's half-life can vary dramatically between individuals, ranging from 2 to 12+ hours, with direct implications for sleep timing decisions.
  • Melatonin metabolism: Methylation patterns affecting the genes involved in melatonin production (including AANAT and ASMT), receptor sensitivity, and clearance—essential processes that regulate your natural sleep-wake cycles and responsiveness to darkness. These markers examine why some individuals produce adequate melatonin while others may have compromised signalling despite similar environmental conditions.

Stress Response & Resilience +

See how your biology influences stress processing and recovery capacity—so you can optimise your environment for sustained resilience.

  • Stress adaptation: Methylation patterns in genes regulating the HPA axis, including glucocorticoid receptor sensitivity, corticotropin-releasing hormone expression, and stress feedback mechanisms. These markers examine the epigenetic regulation of how quickly your stress response activates, how intensely it manifests, and how efficiently it deactivates—key factors in both acute and chronic stress resilience.
  • Cortisol level propensity: Epigenetic sites affecting basal cortisol production, circadian cortisol variations, and enzyme pathways involved in cortisol metabolism (including 11β-HSD types 1 and 2). These patterns help explain individual differences in morning cortisol surge, daily cortisol rhythm, and clearance efficiency that affect everything from energy levels to immune function.
  • Recovery efficiency: Methylation markers influencing parasympathetic nervous system activation, including vagal tone regulation, acetylcholine signalling, and parasympathetic-sympathetic balance. These patterns reveal biological factors affecting how quickly your body can shift from "fight-or-flight" to "rest-and-digest" states—critical for both sleep initiation and stress recovery.

Emotional Balance +

This module evaluates DNA methylation patterns in genes controlling mood regulation, emotional processing, and psychological resilience.

  • Anxiety propensity: Methylation sites affecting amygdala reactivity, GABA receptor function, and fear processing networks—potentially explaining individual variations in worry patterns, vigilance, and sensitivity to potential threats. These markers examine biological factors underlying differences in anxiety sensitivity that can significantly impact both sleep quality and stress perception.
  • Depression tendency: Epigenetic patterns influencing serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine signalling—including methylation in transporter genes, receptor expression regions, and synthesis pathways. These markers help explain biological factors affecting mood stability, emotional regulation, and vulnerability to negative thought patterns during stress or sleep disruption.
  • Mood-induced sleeplessness risk: Methylation sites specifically associated with how emotional states affect sleep onset and maintenance—focusing on the connections between limbic system activation, rumination tendencies, and sleep regulatory networks. These patterns reveal why some individuals are particularly vulnerable to sleep disruption during periods of emotional challenge.

Hormonal Function +

This assessment identifies the biological markers regulating key hormone systems that influence sleep-wake cycles and stress resilience.

  • Thyroid function markers: Methylation patterns affecting TSH receptor sensitivity, thyroid hormone conversion (T4 to T3), and cellular thyroid response—crucial processes that regulate metabolism, energy availability, and core body temperature. These markers examine epigenetic factors affecting thyroid function beyond standard blood tests, revealing patterns that influence energy availability and temperature regulation during sleep.
  • DHEA-S propensity: Epigenetic sites influencing the production of this important stress-protective hormone that serves as a precursor to both estrogen and testosterone. Methylation patterns in genes affecting DHEA synthesis, sulfation, and receptor binding help explain individual variations in this "youth hormone" that supports resilience against the negative effects of stress and aging.
  • Cortisol patterns: Methylation markers in glucocorticoid receptor genes, HPA axis regulatory regions, and cortisol metabolism pathways—affecting both the production and cellular effects of this primary stress hormone. These patterns reveal factors influencing your natural cortisol rhythm, including morning cortisol surge, evening decline, and receptor sensitivity throughout target tissues.

Nutrient Processing & Utilisation +

This module evaluates DNA methylation patterns in genes controlling the absorption, activation, and cellular use of key nutrients that support sleep quality and stress resilience.

  • Vitamin B12 level propensity: Methylation sites affecting intestinal absorption factors (intrinsic factor, R-binder), transport proteins (transcobalamin), cellular uptake mechanisms, and intracellular processing of this critical nutrient—essential for nervous system function, energy production, and DNA synthesis. These markers help explain why some individuals maintain adequate B12 status despite similar intake levels.
  • Vitamin B9 need: Epigenetic patterns influencing folate transport, cellular uptake, retention, and utilisation—particularly focusing on methylation sites affecting dihydrofolate reductase and folate receptor expression. These markers reveal biological factors influencing your folate requirements and how efficiently your body can utilise different forms (synthetic folic acid vs. natural folate).
  • Vitamin B6 level propensity: Methylation sites associated with the absorption, phosphorylation, and cellular utilisation of this critical cofactor for over 150 enzymatic reactions—particularly those involved in neurotransmitter synthesis, including serotonin, dopamine, GABA, and melatonin production. These patterns help explain individual variations in B6 status despite similar intake.
  • MTHFR activity: Epigenetic markers affecting the expression and function of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase—a key enzyme that converts folate to its active form (5-MTHF) and supports the methylation cycle. This analysis examines methylation patterns beyond genetic polymorphisms, revealing how environmental factors may influence this crucial pathway.
  • Vitamin D metabolism: Methylation patterns affecting vitamin D binding protein expression, 25-hydroxylase and 1Îą-hydroxylase activity, and vitamin D receptor sensitivity—key factors in how your body processes, activates, and responds to this crucial nutrient-hormone. These markers help explain individual variations in vitamin D status and cellular response beyond basic blood tests.

Electrolyte & Mineral Sensitivity +

This analysis reveals how your body's processing of key minerals affects nervous system function, muscle relaxation, and recovery capacity.

  • Sodium sensitivity: Methylation patterns in genes regulating sodium channels, transporters, and osmotic balance—potentially explaining individual differences in how sodium intake affects blood pressure, fluid balance, and neurological function. These markers examine biological factors beyond simple sodium levels, focusing on your body's unique response to this essential electrolyte.
  • Potassium sensitivity: Epigenetic sites influencing potassium channel expression, cellular transport, and regulatory pathways—crucial for nerve transmission, muscle function, and cardiovascular health. These patterns help explain why some individuals may be more sensitive to potassium fluctuations with implications for muscle cramps, heart rhythm, and nervous system function.
  • Magnesium deficiency risk: Methylation markers affecting intestinal absorption, renal conservation, cellular transport, and utilisation of this critical mineral—essential for over 300 enzymatic reactions, particularly those involving energy production, muscle relaxation, and nervous system function. These patterns reveal biological factors influencing your magnesium status beyond simple intake levels.

Detoxification Pathways +

This module evaluates DNA methylation patterns in genes controlling cellular protection, antioxidant defense, and compound processing that support recovery and resilience.

  • Glutathione level propensity: Methylation patterns affecting the synthesis, regeneration, and utilisation of this master antioxidant—examining sites that influence glutathione synthetase, glutathione peroxidase, and glutathione S-transferase expression. These markers reveal biological factors affecting your cellular protection capacity, particularly during sleep disruption and stress exposure.
  • NRF2 activity: Epigenetic sites regulating Nuclear factor erythroid 2–related factor 2—the master regulator of the antioxidant response that activates over 200 genes involved in cellular protection and detoxification. Methylation patterns affecting both NRF2 expression and its inhibitor (KEAP1) help explain individual variations in cellular defence capacity.
  • Methylation efficiency: Methylation markers affecting one-carbon metabolism, including patterns influencing S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) production, methionine synthase activity, and homocysteine processing. These sites reveal factors influencing your methylation cycle—a crucial biochemical pathway supporting neurotransmitter synthesis, hormone processing, and detoxification.
  • Choline need: Epigenetic patterns determining requirements for this essential nutrient—critical for phospholipid synthesis, neurotransmitter production, methylation support, and liver function. Methylation sites affecting choline transport, utilisation, and phosphatidylcholine synthesis help explain individual variations in choline requirements beyond standard recommendations.

Inflammatory & Immune Balance +

This assessment identifies the biological markers regulating inflammatory response, immune signalling, and cellular protection during recovery periods.

  • CRP inflammation: Methylation patterns in genes controlling C-reactive protein production, baseline expression levels, and acute response signalling—a key systemic inflammatory marker with implications for both sleep quality and recovery capacity. These markers examine epigenetic factors influencing chronic low-grade inflammation beyond standard blood tests.
  • IL-10 inflammation risk: Epigenetic sites influencing this powerful anti-inflammatory cytokine's production, receptor sensitivity, and signalling cascades—essential for resolving inflammation and restoring balance after immune activation. Methylation patterns in IL-10 promoter regions and regulatory elements help explain individual variations in anti-inflammatory capacity.
  • Mast cell/IgE activation: Methylation markers affecting mast cell activation threshold, IgE receptor expression, and histamine release mechanisms—with implications for sensitivity to environmental triggers, food compounds, and stress-induced inflammatory responses. These patterns reveal biological factors influencing your sensitivity to common triggers that may impact sleep and recovery.
  • Benzene risk: Epigenetic patterns associated with the processing of this environmental compound—examining methylation sites affecting CYP2E1 and other detoxification enzymes involved in benzene metabolism. These markers may reflect broader sensitivity to environmental chemicals that can impact sleep quality and recovery capacity.

Physical Stress Manifestations +

This module evaluates DNA methylation patterns in genes affecting how psychological stress manifests in physical symptoms.

  • Teeth grinding tendency: Methylation sites influencing neuromuscular regulation, masticatory muscle tone, and stress-induced motor activation—potentially explaining why some individuals express stress through bruxism even without conscious awareness. These patterns reveal biological factors affecting this common sleep-disruptive behavior that impacts both dental health and sleep quality.
  • TMJ sensitivity: Epigenetic markers affecting temporomandibular joint nociception, inflammation signaling, and pain perception—revealing connections between stress, facial tension, and physical discomfort. These patterns help explain individual variations in jaw discomfort that may disrupt sleep or amplify stress perception.
  • Physical tension patterns: Methylation patterns in genes influencing muscle tone regulation, sympathetic nervous system distribution, and stress-induced muscle activation—determining whether stress tends to manifest as neck, shoulder, or other specific physical tension patterns. These markers reveal biological factors behind individual differences in where and how stress manifests physically.

This comprehensive analysis moves far beyond standard sleep assessments to reveal the epigenetic foundation of your recovery biology. By understanding these patterns, we can develop truly personalised approaches to optimise your sleep quality and stress resilience.

Analysis & Scoring: From Data to Insights

How we transform complex methylation data into actionable insights.

The P4Health Methylation Score

Our proprietary scoring system synthesises multiple epigenetic indicators into actionable metrics across each module.

Pattern Analysis

Evaluation of methylation distributions across key regulatory regions

Functional Impact

Potential influence of methylation patterns on gene expression

System Integration

How patterns in one system may affect other biological processes

Actionable Insights

These scores provide clear insights into your epigenetic status and establish a baseline for tracking changes over time as you implement lifestyle modifications.

From Analysis to Action: Personalised Insights

Your comprehensive dashboard translates complex epigenetic data into practical understanding:

Lifestyle Integration

  • Cognitive enhancement strategies optimised for your epigenetic profile
  • Nutritional considerations based on methylation patterns
  • Sleep optimisation strategies aligned with your circadian indicators
  • Stress management approaches tailored to your stress response profile

Advanced Understanding

  • System interconnections showing how different aspects of your cognitive biology influence each other
  • Potential optimisation pathways based on your specific methylation patterns
  • Tracking capabilities to monitor changes over time as you implement lifestyle modifications

Why This Comprehensive Analysis Matters

The Power of 25 Recovery Markers
  • • Recovery-specific insights: This specialised 25-marker analysis reveals epigenetic regulation patterns that specifically influence sleep quality and stress resilience—beyond basic health markers.
  • • Personalised precision: Your recovery epigenetic patterns help explain why generic sleep and stress approaches may yield different results for you than others.
  • • Actionable specificity: By identifying specific methylation patterns, we can pinpoint precise lifestyle, nutritional, and environmental interventions most likely to support your unique recovery profile.
  • • Longitudinal tracking: Establishing your baseline sleep and stress epigenetic profile allows you to monitor changes over time as you implement lifestyle modifications—creating a feedback loop for continuous optimisation.

Scientific Foundations

Our analysis and interpretation are grounded in peer-reviewed epigenetic research, including:

Testing Methodology

Our analysis begins with a simple, non-invasive collection process:

Sample Collection

Specialised saliva collection kit designed for maximum DNA stability and transport integrity

TGA-Registered Analysis

ARTG entries 297844 and 398180 ensure compliance with Australian therapeutic goods standards

Advanced Processing

Hundreds of thousands of methylation sites analysed with high precision using validated technology

Quality Assurance: Every analysis undergoes rigorous quality control including sample integrity verification, technical replication, reference standard validation, and bioinformatic cross-referencing against established methylation databases.

Research Foundations

Our analysis and interpretation are grounded in peer-reviewed epigenetic research, including:

  • Genome-wide methylation studies examining sleep quality and stress resilience
  • Interventional research exploring how lifestyle factors influence methylation
  • Twin studies demonstrating the impact of environment on epigenetic patterns
  • Longitudinal analyses tracking methylation changes and recovery outcomes
Continuous Updates

As research evolves, our interpretative frameworks are continuously updated to provide you with the latest scientific insights.

Integration with the P4Health Ecosystem

The Cognition Epigenetic Profile achieves its full potential when combined with our other testing modalities:

  • Epigenetics + Microbiome: Discover connections between your gut microbial populations and methylation patterns, revealing how the gut-brain axis influences sleep quality and stress resilience.
  • Epigenetics + Wearable Tracking: Understand how sleep patterns, stress levels, and recovery metrics correlate with your epigenetic profile, creating a comprehensive picture of your recovery landscape.

Together, these insights provide a complete view of your biological landscape, enabling truly personalised approaches to optimisation.

Technology Integration Roadmap

Our platform is designed for continuous advancement:

AI-Driven Insights

Machine learning algorithms will provide increasingly personalised recommendations as our database grows

Real-Time Integration

Future correlation with wearable device data for dynamic lifestyle optimisation

Intervention Tracking

Monitoring epigenetic responses to specific longevity interventions and supplements

The P4Health Approach

This test is part of the broader P4Health platform — built on our Predictive, Preventative, Personalised, and Participatory approach. We don't just analyse data; we help you act on it through a connected ecosystem of tracking tools, health journeys, and community-led support.

Predictive

Identify health trajectories before symptoms appear through epigenetic pattern analysis

Preventative

Implement targeted interventions based on your specific biological vulnerabilities

Personalised

Customise recommendations based on your unique epigenetic profile and responses

Participatory

Engage with community-driven health journeys and peer-supported optimisation

Clinical and Research Applications

Our comprehensive epigenetic analysis supports various applications:

Healthcare Practitioners

Our clinical partnership program provides specialised access to patient management tools, batch testing options, and practitioner resources.

Corporate Wellness Teams

Our enterprise solutions offer scalable testing, analytics dashboards, and group health optimisation programs.

Important Information

Educational Purpose: This information is provided for educational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. The epigenetic analysis is designed to provide insights about biological patterns that may support general wellness. Individual results may vary. Always consult with your healthcare professional regarding health concerns or before making significant changes to your health regimen.

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Important Information

This scientific overview is provided for educational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. The epigenetic analysis is designed to provide insights about biological patterns that may support general wellness. Our analysis uses TGA-registered technology (ARTG entries 297844 and 398180). Individual results may vary. Always consult with your healthcare professional regarding health concerns or before making significant changes to your health regimen.