Mark Reynolds Bloodwork and Health Editor
Muscle Science Editorial Team

Mark Reynolds

Bloodwork & Health Editor

Mark Reynolds writes about bloodwork, health monitoring, cardiovascular markers, liver markers, kidney markers, and practical risk awareness for serious lifters. His work focuses on helping readers understand lab results as context, not as self-diagnosis.

Editorial Note

This contributor writes under a pseudonym. The photograph above is a stylized portrait, not a real image of the writer. See our About page for details on our editorial team and anonymity policy.

Editorial Role

What Mark Covers

Mark covers the health-monitoring side of performance education: CBC, hematocrit, hemoglobin, lipids, liver enzymes, kidney markers, blood pressure, glucose, and related lab work. The goal is to make bloodwork easier to understand without turning lab numbers into internet diagnosis.

His articles are built for adult readers who want clear explanations before going deeper into PED, TRT, hormone, or performance-health content. The writing style is direct, practical, and focused on context: what a marker can suggest, what it cannot prove, and when medical review matters.

01 / Bloodwork

CBC, lipids, liver markers, kidney markers, glucose, hormones, and baseline testing.

02 / Monitoring

How to think about trends, repeat testing, timing, symptoms, and health context.

03 / PED Context

How performance-enhancing drug exposure can change the bloodwork conversation.

04 / Risk Awareness

Cardiovascular, liver, kidney, and blood-pressure context without fear-based writing.

Published Work

Bloodwork & Health Articles

These articles are part of the Muscle Science Bloodwork & Health section. They are designed to be read as a sequence: start with baseline testing, then move into specific markers.

Editorial Standard

How Mark Approaches Health Content

Mark’s writing avoids two common extremes: panic-based health content and careless forum-style advice. Bloodwork is treated as useful information, not as a replacement for clinical care.

Each guide aims to explain what a marker means, why it may change, what can confuse interpretation, and how it fits into a larger monitoring picture. The practical goal is better questions, clearer context, and fewer reckless assumptions.

Important: Mark Reynolds is an editorial author, not presented as a physician. Muscle Science content is educational and should not be used as diagnosis, treatment, or personal medical instruction.

Clear Education Before Bigger Decisions

Muscle Science exists to make performance-health topics easier to understand, especially for readers who want more structure, less noise, and better context before making serious decisions.