Anti Mullerian Hormone (AMH)
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Anti Mullerian Hormone (AMH)

Evaluating Ovarian Reserve for Comprehensive Reproductive Health Insight

The Ibn Sina Trust
Praava Health
Dr Lal PathLabs
Omnicare Diagnostic Limited
Thyrocare Bangladesh Ltd
Brac Healthcare
Popular Diagnostic Centre Ltd
JG Healthcare
3200
4000
20% OFF
Sample Type
blood
Fasting Required
No
Description

In women, cells inside the follicles of the ovaries produce AMH. Follicles are tiny fluid-filled sacs in the ovary that contain and release eggs. AMH levels correspond to the number of eggs you have or your ovarian reserve: Higher AMH levels mean more eggs and a higher ovarian reserve. Lower AMH levels mean fewer eggs and a lower ovarian reserve.

Covid Safety

Assured

Free Report

Counselling

How our test process works!

Step 1

Sample Collection

Vaccinated Phlebotomists collects from syringe in the barcoded vials

Step 2

Sample Storage

Only vaccinated phelbos are assigned orders

Step 3

High Tech Facility

Lab ingests the sample into processing machines which are 100% automated

Step 4

Accurate Digital Reports

The reports are generated by the processing machines and clinically correlated by doctors

Overview

The Anti-Mullerian Hormone (AMH) test measures the levels of AMH in the blood, which is a hormone produced by ovarian follicles. It is commonly used to assess a woman's ovarian reserve (egg supply) and is also a marker for certain reproductive and endocrine conditions.

Risk assessment

PCOS, Infertility, Ovarian cancer, Early menopause

Ranges

Women of reproductive age: 1.0 - 4.0 ng/mL (or 7.0 - 28.6 pmol/L)

Low AMH (< 1.0 ng/mL): Reduced ovarian reserve.

High AMH (> 4.0 ng/mL): Could indicate PCOS or ovarian hyperstimulation risk.

Men and Children: Lower levels, as AMH has different roles outside female fertility.

Test result interpretation

High AMH: Suggests a good ovarian reserve but may indicate PCOS if significantly elevated.

Low AMH: Indicates reduced ovarian reserve or approaching menopause.

Normal AMH: Suggests adequate ovarian reserve.

Sample types

Blood Sample: Collected via venipuncture.

Frequently Asked Question