DOCS Genetics
Add On: Pre-Conception Genetics Kit
Add On: Pre-Conception Genetics Kit
Add On Kit: Preconception Genetic
Prepare your body for pregnancy - guided by your biology
What does it really take to prepare your body for a healthy pregnancy?
Not just taking a prenatal.
Not just eating “clean.”
Not just tracking ovulation.
Because preparing for conception is not one-size-fits-all.
Every woman enters pregnancy with a different genetic foundation, different nutrient needs, detoxification capacity, inflammatory tendencies, hormone patterns, methylation status, oxidative stress load, clotting risk, mood vulnerability, and vitamin requirements.
And those differences matter. Especially before conception.
The Preconception Genetic Add On Kit helps you understand the biological patterns that may influence fertility preparation, pregnancy resilience, nutrient needs, inflammation balance, hormone metabolism, and long-term maternal wellness.
This test analyzes 126 targeted SNPs across the systems most relevant to preconception health.
Not to diagnose.
Not to predict pregnancy outcomes.
Not to replace medical care.
But to help you understand your biology before one of the most important transitions of your life.
Methylation Panel
Folate. Detox. DNA repair. Early development.
Methylation is one of the most important biological processes to understand before pregnancy.
It affects how your body uses folate and B vitamins, repairs DNA, regulates neurotransmitters, supports detoxification, and helps maintain healthy cellular function.
Before conception, this matters deeply.
Because methylation influences both maternal resilience and the biological environment in which early development begins.
The Preconception Genetic Kit analyzes:
- 9 SNPs related to methylation
- Under-methylator tendencies
- Over-methylator tendencies
- MTHFR-related pathway patterns
- Folate and B-vitamin utilization
- Detoxification and DNA repair considerations
When you understand how your body methylates, you can approach preconception support with more clarity.
Not guessing which prenatal is “best.”
Understanding what your body may actually need.
Estrogen Panel
Hormone levels. Receptor response. Metabolite clearance.
Estrogen is central to fertility, cycle health, mood, metabolism, and reproductive readiness.
But estrogen is not just about how much you have.
It’s also about how your body responds to it , and how effectively your body clears estrogen metabolites after they’ve done their job.
Imbalances in estrogen signaling or elimination may influence cycle symptoms, PMS patterns, breast tenderness, mood shifts, fertility challenges, and hormone-related stress on the body.
This panel explores:
- 13 SNPs related to estrogen
- Estrogen level propensity
- Estrogen receptor response
- Estrogen metabolite elimination
- Hormone processing patterns
- Detoxification pathways connected to estrogen clearance
When you understand your estrogen genetics, you gain a clearer picture of how your body may regulate and respond to one of the most important hormones in reproductive health.
Not just hormone levels.
Hormone behavior.
IL-10 Inflammation Risk
Immune tolerance. Inflammation balance. Pregnancy readiness.
A healthy inflammatory response matters before conception.
Your immune system needs to be responsive enough to protect you, but regulated enough to maintain balance.
IL-10 is a key anti-inflammatory cytokine involved in immune tolerance and inflammation control. Genetic variations in this pathway may influence how strongly your body responds to stressors, infections, environmental triggers, or inflammatory load.
This panel explores:
- 5 SNPs related to IL-10 inflammation risk
- Immune tolerance tendencies
- Inflammation regulation patterns
- Genetic context for heightened inflammatory response
- General inflammatory resilience before conception
When you understand your inflammation tendencies, you can approach preconception wellness with greater awareness of the immune environment your body may be carrying.
Because pregnancy preparation is not just hormonal.
It’s immunological.
Glutathione Panel
Detoxification. Antioxidant defense. Cellular protection.
Glutathione is one of the body’s master antioxidant systems.
It helps protect cells from oxidative stress, supports detoxification, and plays a key role in resilience against environmental exposures.
Before pregnancy, glutathione capacity matters because oxidative stress and toxin burden can influence overall cellular health, hormone metabolism, egg quality conversations, and maternal energy.
This panel explores:
- 13 SNPs related to glutathione
- Glutathione level propensity
- NRF2 activity
- Antioxidant defense patterns
- Detoxification pathway tendencies
- Cellular resilience under oxidative stress
When you understand your glutathione genetics, you can better understand how your body may handle environmental strain and oxidative load.
Not just detoxing harder.
Supporting smarter.
B Vitamin Panel
Folate. B12. Biotin. B6. Prenatal nutrient needs.
B vitamins are foundational before and during pregnancy.
They influence methylation, nervous system function, red blood cell formation, energy production, mood regulation, DNA synthesis, and early fetal development.
But not everyone uses B vitamins the same way.
Some women may have increased genetic need for certain forms, reduced tolerance for others, or variations in how these nutrients are absorbed, converted, or utilized.
This panel explores:
- 14 SNPs related to B vitamins
- Benefit of folinic acid
- B12 level propensity
- B9 requirement
- B6 level propensity
- B7 deficiency propensity
- MTHFR-related patterns
- Folic acid supplementation tolerance
When you understand your B-vitamin genetics, choosing prenatal nutrients becomes less generic.
More informed. More aligned.
Vitamin D Panel
Deficiency risk. Absorption. Activation.
Vitamin D plays a major role in immune function, hormone signaling, mood, bone health, and pregnancy wellness.
But vitamin D status is not only about sun exposure or supplementation.
Your genetics can influence how well you absorb vitamin D, how likely you are to run low, and how efficiently inactive vitamin D is converted into its active form.
This panel explores:
- 12 SNPs related to vitamin D
- Vitamin D deficiency risk
- Vitamin D dietary absorption
- Inactive vs. active vitamin D correlation
- Genetic patterns influencing vitamin D utilization
- Immune and hormone-related vitamin D pathways
When you understand your vitamin D genetics, you gain clearer context for one of the most commonly discussed nutrients in fertility and pregnancy preparation.
Not just “take more.” Understand how your body uses it.
Choline Panel
Brain development. Liver function. Methylation support.
Choline is one of the most important nutrients in preconception and pregnancy health.
It supports methylation, liver function, cell membrane integrity, and healthy neurological development.
Yet many women do not know their choline needs may be genetically influenced.
This panel explores:
- 10 SNPs related to choline
- Choline need
- Choline deficiency severity
- Risk of organ dysfunction from choline deficiency
- Choline-related methylation support
- Genetic patterns connected to cellular and neurological development
When you understand your choline genetics, you gain insight into a nutrient that is often underemphasized, but deeply important for preconception planning.
Especially for the brain. Especially early.
Iron Panel
Deficiency. Overload. Transport. Balance.
Iron is essential for oxygen transport, energy production, brain function, and pregnancy health.
But iron balance is delicate.
Some women are more prone to deficiency.
Others may have genetic tendencies toward overload.
Some may have differences in serum iron or transferrin patterns that affect how iron is carried and used.
This panel explores:
- 10 SNPs related to iron
- Iron deficiency risk
- Serum iron level propensity
- Transferrin level propensity
- Iron overload risk
- Iron transport and utilization patterns
When you understand your iron genetics, you can approach iron conversations with more nuance.
Because more is not always better. And low is not always simple.
Depression & Mood Panel
Mood vulnerability. Sleep disruption. Emotional resilience.
The preconception and pregnancy journey can be emotionally intense.
Hormonal shifts, sleep disruption, stress, uncertainty, and life transition can all influence mood, but genetics may also shape emotional vulnerability and resilience.
Understanding mood-related genetic tendencies before conception can help you stay aware, supported, and proactive.
This panel explores:
- 17 SNPs related to depression and mood
- Depression propensity
- Mood-induced sleeplessness risk
- Emotional regulation pathways
- Stress-related mood vulnerability
- Genetic context for sleep and mood interactions
This is not about expecting emotional difficulty.
It is about understanding where added awareness may be valuable.
Because maternal emotional wellness matters.
Before pregnancy.
During pregnancy.
After birth.
Oxidative Stress Panel
Free radicals. Cellular strain. Antioxidant need.
Oxidative stress occurs when the body has more free radical activity than it can comfortably neutralize.
Before conception, oxidative balance matters because cellular health, inflammation, mitochondrial function, and reproductive resilience are all influenced by antioxidant capacity.
This panel explores:
- 10 SNPs related to oxidative stress
- Oxidative stress support pathways
- Antioxidant defense tendencies
- Cellular resilience patterns
- Genetic context for inflammation and detox burden
When you understand your oxidative stress genetics, you gain insight into how your body may respond to internal and environmental strain.
Not from fear. From preparation.
Thrombosis Panel
Clotting tendencies. Circulation. Vascular awareness.
Healthy circulation is essential before and during pregnancy.
Some genetic patterns may influence clotting tendency, vascular function, or thrombotic risk. Understanding these patterns can provide useful context for conversations with a healthcare provider, especially when planning pregnancy.
This panel explores:
- 13 SNPs related to thrombosis
- Ischemic stroke propensity
- Venous thrombosis propensity
- Clotting pathway tendencies
- Vascular risk awareness
- Circulatory patterns relevant to preconception planning
This information is not diagnostic.
It is context.
And for some women, that context can be deeply valuable when preparing for pregnancy with clarity and care.
126 Targeted SNPs. One Clearer View of Preconception Health.
The Preconception Genetic Add On Kit brings together the systems that matter most when preparing your body for pregnancy.
This test includes:
- Methylation Panel: 9 SNPs
- Estrogen Panel: 13 SNPs
- IL-10 Inflammation Risk: 5 SNPs
- Glutathione Panel: 13 SNPs
- B Vitamin Panel: 14 SNPs
- Vitamin D Panel: 12 SNPs
- Choline Panel: 10 SNPs
- Iron Panel: 10 SNPs
- Depression & Mood Panel: 17 SNPs
- Oxidative Stress Panel: 10 SNPs
- Thrombosis Panel: 13 SNPs
Total: 126 targeted SNPs
Together, these panels help you understand biological tendencies that may influence fertility preparation, nutrient needs, hormone metabolism, inflammation, detoxification, mood resilience, clotting pathways, and pregnancy readiness.
The Bigger Picture
Preconception is not just about getting pregnant.
It is about preparing the terrain.
Your body is the environment where early development begins.
That environment is shaped by:
- Methylation
- Hormones
- Inflammation
- Antioxidant capacity
- Nutrient utilization
- Iron balance
- Choline status
- Vitamin D pathways
- Mood resilience
- Detoxification
- Circulation and clotting tendencies
The Preconception Genetic Kit gives you insight into these core systems before pregnancy begins,, so you can have more informed conversations, ask better questions, and make thoughtful choices with your provider.
What This Test Is - And What It Isn’t
This test is:
- Educational
- Research-informed
- Designed for awareness
- Intended to support better questions and planning
It is not:
- Diagnostic
- Predictive
- A replacement for fertility care
- A guarantee of pregnancy outcomes
- A substitute for medical evaluation
It gives you genetic context you can use to support more informed preconception conversations and long-term wellness planning.
Why Women Choose the Preconception Genetic Kit
Because they do not want to guess about prenatal nutrients.
Because they want to understand methylation before choosing folate support.
Because they want insight into estrogen metabolism, inflammation, and detox pathways.
Because they want to know whether iron, choline, vitamin D, or B-vitamin needs may deserve closer attention.
Because they want to prepare their body with more clarity.
Because creating life is too important to approach with generic advice alone.
A Clearer Way to Prepare for Pregnancy
Most women are told to take a prenatal and start trying.
But your body is more complex than that.
The Preconception Genetic Add On Kit helps you understand the biological patterns that may shape your readiness for pregnancy, so your preparation can become more personal, more informed, and more aligned with your body.
Not from fear. From clarity.
Not because you need to control everything.
Because you deserve to understand the body you are preparing to share.
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