Marker Glossary
The Marker Glossary is a searchable reference for every biomarker tracked in Get Based. Open it any time you want to understand what a marker measures, what the reference and optimal ranges are, or what your latest result was.
Opening the Glossary
Click the book icon in the top header. The glossary modal opens over whatever page you are on.
Browsing by Category
Markers are grouped by category — Biochemistry, Hormones, Lipids, Hematology, and so on. Each category has a collapsible header. Click the header to expand or collapse the list of markers within it. All categories start expanded by default.
Searching
Type in the search box at the top of the glossary to filter markers by name. The list narrows in real time as you type. The search works across all categories simultaneously, so you do not need to know which category a marker belongs to.
TIP
Searching for partial words works — typing "creat" will match Creatinine, Creatinine Kinase, and any other marker whose name contains those letters.
What Each Entry Shows
For each marker you will see:
- Name — The full display name of the marker
- Latest value — Your most recent result for this marker, if you have one
- Reference range — The standard normal range
- Optimal range — A tighter range associated with better long-term outcomes, when one is defined
- Description — A plain-language explanation of what the marker measures and why it matters
Clicking Through to Detail
Click any marker entry in the glossary to close the glossary and open the detail modal for that marker. The detail modal shows your full history for that marker, the trend, notes, and an AI interpretation.
Custom Markers
Markers that were imported from your lab PDFs but are not part of the standard schema appear in the glossary under their assigned category, marked with a bookmark icon. Their descriptions are fetched from the AI the first time you view them.