A complete health assessment and prevention of age-related risks are the foundation of an active life for decades to come.
Why is a check-up important?
To evaluate all body systems. Men don’t always manage to make health a priority between work and family responsibilities. By age 45, the risks of chronic conditions may already become established, so it is important to start addressing them.
To preserve your energy. Life expectancy has increased, but to stay active through the years ahead, it is important to monitor your health and correct deficiencies in time.
To protect your future. With age, men face a higher risk of heart disease and liver, kidney, and prostate conditions. UMC designed check-ups to give you a practical tool — and confidence about tomorrow.
What makes the Optimal Check-Up different?
The check-up includes broad, evidence-based assessments recommended by leading Western institutions. All key physician visits and evaluations can be completed in three clinic visits — and you will receive a clear plan for next steps along with your results.
The Optimal Check-Up includes an essential cardiology evaluation for this age group — a cardiologist visit and an echocardiogram — as well as thyroid and abdominal ultrasound. It is also important to check for infections that can remain silent until they progress into serious conditions.
What risks can the check-up help identify?
- cardiovascular disease (arrhythmias, coronary artery disease, structural changes);
- hypertension and its complications;
- liver and pancreatic diseases;
- chronic kidney disease;
- benign prostatic hyperplasia and inflammatory conditions;
- early prostate cancer risk;
- thyroid disorders;
- prediabetes/diabetes;
- lipid metabolism disorders;
- vitamin D and iron deficiency;
- gout and uric acid metabolism disorders;
- silent inflammatory processes;
- infections (hepatitis, syphilis, HIV);
- gastrointestinal disease and colorectal oncologic risk factors.
What’s included in the check-up?
Your primary care physician, urologist, and cardiologist will take your medical history and discuss all symptoms and concerns. You will then be referred for laboratory testing, ultrasound studies, and an echocardiogram.
Consultations
- Initial consultation with a primary care physician
- Cardiologist consultation
- Urologist consultation
- Follow-up consultation with a primary care physician
Diagnostic testing
- ECG
- Echocardiogram (cardiac ultrasound)
- Kidney and urinary tract ultrasound
- Prostate ultrasound
- Abdominal ultrasound
- Thyroid ultrasound
- Anthropometry
- Blood pressure measurement
- Oxygen saturation measurement
Laboratory testing
- Complete blood count with differential
- ESR
- TSH
- Blood glucose
- Lipid panel (triglycerides, total cholesterol, HDL, LDL)
- Creatinine
- ALT — alanine aminotransferase
- AST — aspartate aminotransferase
- Ferritin
- CRP — C-reactive protein
- GGT — gamma-glutamyl transferase
- Uric acid
- Alkaline phosphatase
- Total protein
- Protein fractions (serum protein electrophoresis)
- Total calcium
- Electrolyte panel (Na, K, Cl)
- Vitamin D
- Hepatitis B
- Hepatitis C
- HIV
- Syphilis
- Total PSA
- Urea
- Urinalysis
- Stool test for occult blood
What will you receive after the check-up?
Your comprehensive health report will include not only a description of your current status, but also practical recommendations to reduce risks over the next 1–3 years, helping you feel better in the future. Recommendations will be based on evidence-based medicine approaches.
The report will also include:
- cardiology conclusion
- urologic profile (prostate + PSA + ultrasound)
- cardiometabolic risk assessment
- liver and kidney profile
- deficiency evaluation and vitamin status
- personalized recommendations on lifestyle, nutrition, and physical activity
We made prevention at UMC simple and convenient. You don’t have to guess or search online for which tests to choose — we designed the plan for you. All that’s left is to follow it step by step to feel calm and confident.
