Ambicare Clinic

STD Panel - Basic

Type

Blood Testing

Biomarkers

2

Duration

20 min

Results

3 days

Standard venereological examination for sexually transmitted diseases.

Sexual health screening tests detect sexually transmitted infections (STIs) that often present with no symptoms at all. Many STIs — including chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, HIV, and hepatitis B/C — can be carried asymptomatically for months or years while still being transmissible and causing internal damage. Blood-based STI panels typically screen for HIV (antibody/antigen), syphilis (RPR/VDRL), and hepatitis B and C. Urine or swab tests are usually needed for chlamydia and gonorrhea. Early detection is crucial because most STIs are curable with antibiotics when caught early, and even viral STIs like HIV can be managed effectively with modern antiretroviral therapy when detected promptly.

Key Details

Infections Screened
4–10 (varies by panel)
Fasting Required
No
Sample Type
Blood draw (urine for some infections)
Turnaround
1–5 business days
Confidential
Yes, results are private

Who Is This For?

Anyone who is sexually active and hasn't been tested recently. People starting a new relationship who want to know their status. Individuals who have had unprotected sex or multiple partners. Anyone experiencing symptoms like unusual discharge, sores, or painful urination. Routine screening as recommended by health guidelines (annually for sexually active adults).

What's Included

HIV 1/2 antibody/antigen (4th gen)
Syphilis (RPR/VDRL or specific antibody)
Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)
Hepatitis C antibody

Preparation Required

No fasting required. For the most accurate HIV results, test at least 2–4 weeks after potential exposure (window period varies by test type). Urine-based tests for chlamydia/gonorrhea require not urinating for at least 1 hour before sample collection.

Price
Kč 2,000
Category
Diagnostic
Sample Type
Blood draw
Duration
20 min
Results
3 days

Ambicare Clinic

Dermatovenerology clinic offering skin disease treatment and STD testing.

Frequently Asked Questions