Advanced Gut Testing

£387.00

A deeper look at your gut health

While many mainstream stool tests only skim the surface, Tru Health’s GI360™ by Doctor’s Data takes a far more comprehensive and clinical approach.

It looks not just at your microbiome, but at how well your digestive system is actually functioning. This means we can uncover things that often get missed, including:

  • Hidden imbalances in gut bacteria

  • Poor digestion or absorption

  • Low beneficial microbes

  • Inflammatory markers

  • Stealth infections such as parasites or pathogenic bacteria

  • Signs of gut lining irritation or immune activation

All of these can quietly impact your energy, mood, digestion, immunity, hormones, and overall vitality.

Using advanced laboratory technology and clinically meaningful biomarkers, GI360™ provides a detailed picture of your digestive health, helping us understand why symptoms are happening, not just what they are.

We recommend completing this test alongside 1:1 support from a practitioner, so you receive clear, expert interpretation of your results. This allows us to identify root causes and create a personalised healing plan, rather than relying on guesswork.

This test is especially helpful if you’re experiencing ongoing symptoms such as bloating, gas, reflux, constipation or diarrhoea, but it’s also incredibly valuable for wider health concerns including autoimmune conditions, skin issues, fatigue, brain fog, and mood changes.

In short, it gives us the insight we need to move from symptoms to solutions.

For more information, email info@truhealth.co.

What to stop before testing

  • Probiotics (capsules, powders, fermented drinks) → stop 2 weeks before.

  • Herbal antimicrobials / antibiotics (oregano oil, berberine, garlic, prescription antibiotics) → stop 2–4 weeks before if possible.

  • Digestive enzymes, HCl, bile acids → stop 3–5 days before.

  • Antifungals (herbal or prescription) → ideally stop 2–4 weeks before.

  • Laxatives / stool softeners (including magnesium oxide or high-dose vitamin C) → stop 2–3 days before if tolerated.

  • PPIs (e.g. omeprazole) → ideally stop 7–14 days before (only if clinically safe; otherwise note usage).

Other important points

  • Complete the test on a normal diet is ideal.

  • Avoid alcohol and unusual foods the day before.

  • Ideally send samples Monday–Wednesday, so they arrive at the lab within the week, as the lab is closed over the weekend.

A deeper look at your gut health

While many mainstream stool tests only skim the surface, Tru Health’s GI360™ by Doctor’s Data takes a far more comprehensive and clinical approach.

It looks not just at your microbiome, but at how well your digestive system is actually functioning. This means we can uncover things that often get missed, including:

  • Hidden imbalances in gut bacteria

  • Poor digestion or absorption

  • Low beneficial microbes

  • Inflammatory markers

  • Stealth infections such as parasites or pathogenic bacteria

  • Signs of gut lining irritation or immune activation

All of these can quietly impact your energy, mood, digestion, immunity, hormones, and overall vitality.

Using advanced laboratory technology and clinically meaningful biomarkers, GI360™ provides a detailed picture of your digestive health, helping us understand why symptoms are happening, not just what they are.

We recommend completing this test alongside 1:1 support from a practitioner, so you receive clear, expert interpretation of your results. This allows us to identify root causes and create a personalised healing plan, rather than relying on guesswork.

This test is especially helpful if you’re experiencing ongoing symptoms such as bloating, gas, reflux, constipation or diarrhoea, but it’s also incredibly valuable for wider health concerns including autoimmune conditions, skin issues, fatigue, brain fog, and mood changes.

In short, it gives us the insight we need to move from symptoms to solutions.

For more information, email info@truhealth.co.

What to stop before testing

  • Probiotics (capsules, powders, fermented drinks) → stop 2 weeks before.

  • Herbal antimicrobials / antibiotics (oregano oil, berberine, garlic, prescription antibiotics) → stop 2–4 weeks before if possible.

  • Digestive enzymes, HCl, bile acids → stop 3–5 days before.

  • Antifungals (herbal or prescription) → ideally stop 2–4 weeks before.

  • Laxatives / stool softeners (including magnesium oxide or high-dose vitamin C) → stop 2–3 days before if tolerated.

  • PPIs (e.g. omeprazole) → ideally stop 7–14 days before (only if clinically safe; otherwise note usage).

Other important points

  • Complete the test on a normal diet is ideal.

  • Avoid alcohol and unusual foods the day before.

  • Ideally send samples Monday–Wednesday, so they arrive at the lab within the week, as the lab is closed over the weekend.

Analytes tested:

  • % Butyrate

  • % Propionate

  • % Valerate

  • Acinetobacter junii

  • Actinobacteria

  • Actinomycetales

  • Aeromonas spp.

  • Akkermansia muciniphila

  • Alistipes onderdonkii

  • Alistipes spp.

  • ascaris lumbricoides

  • Bacilli class

  • Bacteroides fragilis

  • Bacteroides pectiniophilus

  • Bacteroides spp.

  • Bacteroides spp. & Prevotella spp.

  • Bacteroides stercoris

  • Bacteroides zoogleoformans

  • Balandtidium coli

  • Beta-glurcuronidase

  • Bifidobacterium spp.

  • Blastocystis spp.

  • Butyrate

  • Calprotectin

  • Campylobacter (C. jejuni

  • capillaria hepatica

  • capillaria philippinensis

  • Carbohydrates

  • Catenibacterium mitsuokai

  • Cestodes - Tapeworms

  • Charcot-Leyden Crystals

  • Chilomastix mesnili

  • Clonorchis sinensis

  • Clostridia Class

  • Clostridioides difficile (Toxin A&B)

  • Clostridium L2-50

  • Coprobacillus cateniformis

  • Costridium methylpentosum

  • Cryptosporidium (C. parvum and C. hominis)

  • Dialister invisus

  • Dialister invisus & megasphaera micronuciformis

  • Dientamoeba fragiis

  • Diphyllobothrium latum

  • Dipylidium caninum

  • Dorea spp

  • Dysbiotic Bacteria

  • Edwardsiella tarda

  • Elastase

  • Endolimax nana

  • Entamoeba coli

  • Entamoeba hartmanni

  • Entamoeba histolytica

  • Entamoeba histoytica/ entamoeba dispar

  • Entamoeba polcki

  • Enterobacteriaceae

  • Enterobius vermicularis

  • Enteromonas hominis

  • Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) lt&st

  • Escherichia coli O157

  • Escherichia spp.

  • Eubacterium biforme

  • Eubacterium hallii

  • Eubacterium rectale

  • Eubacterium siraeum

  • Faecalibacterium prausnitzii

  • Fasciola hepatical/Fasciolopsis buski

  • Fat stain

  • Firmicutes

  • Giardia duodenalis

  • Giardia duodenalis (AKA inestinalis & lamblia)

  • Heterophyes heterophyes

  • Hookworm

  • Hymenolepis diminuta

  • Hymenolepis nana

  • Imbalance Bacteria

  • Isospora belli

  • Lachnospiraceae

  • Lactobacillus ruminis & Pediococcus acidilctici

  • Lactobacillus spp.

  • Lactoferrin

  • lodamoeba bütschlii

  • Lysozyme

  • Macroscopic Appearance (Colour

  • Muscle fibres

  • Mycoplasma hominis

  • Nematodes - Round worms

  • Occult blood

  • Parabacteroides johnsonii

  • Parabacteroides spp.

  • Paragonimus westermani

  • Pentatrichomonas hominis

  • pH

  • Phascolartobacterium spp.

  • Plesiomonas shigelloides

  • Pollen

  • Proteobacteria

  • Protozoa

  • RBC microscopy

  • Retortanmonas intestinalis

  • Ruminococcus albus & R. bromii

  • Ruminococcus gnavus

  • Salmonella group

  • Salmonella spp.

  • Secretory IgA

  • Shiga-like toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) stx1&stx2

  • Shigella (S. boydii

  • Shigella group

  • Sreptocococcus spp.

  • Strepococcus salivarius ssp. thermophilus

  • Streptococcus agalactiae & Eubacterium rectale

  • Streptococuss salivarius ssp. thermophilus & S. sanguinis

  • Strongyloides stercoralis

  • Taenia

  • Total SCFA's

  • Trematodes - Flukes

  • Trichuris trichiura

  • Vegetables fibres

  • Veillonella spp.

  • Vibrio cholerae

  • Vibrio spp.

  • Viruses (adenovirus F40/41

  • WBC microscopy

  • Yeast

  • Yeast culture

  • Yersinia spp.