B12 and Folate Test
Check your vitamin B12 and folate levels with a simple home fingerstick test. Ideal for vegans, those on metformin.
Brain fog is a persistent sense of mental cloudiness that impairs clear thinking, memory, and focus — and is frequently caused by correctable nutritional or hormonal imbalances.
Brain fog is not a medical diagnosis but a widely recognised cluster of cognitive symptoms including mental cloudiness, slow processing, difficulty forming words, poor short-term memory, and a general sense of not being able to think clearly. For those who experience it, brain fog can be just as disabling as physical fatigue.
The brain is the body’s most metabolically demanding organ, consuming approximately 20% of total energy at rest. It is therefore highly sensitive to nutritional shortfalls and hormonal disruption. Vitamin B12 is critical for myelin sheath integrity — the protective coating around nerve fibres that enables rapid signal transmission. When B12 is deficient, neural conduction slows and cognitive function suffers. Similarly, thyroid hormones regulate neuronal metabolism; hypothyroidism is a well-documented cause of the mental slowing patients often describe as feeling like wading through treacle. Elevated blood glucose and insulin resistance also impair cerebral energy metabolism, contributing to post-meal cognitive dips.
Brain fog warrants investigation when it persists beyond a few weeks, worsens over time, or significantly impairs work or daily life. A targeted blood panel can identify the majority of biochemically reversible causes and distinguish them from conditions requiring specialist assessment.
Labelling mental cloudiness as simply 'stress' can delay identification of a treatable cause such as B12 deficiency or hypothyroidism. Blood testing provides objective data to guide the next step.
Brain fog commonly clusters with other symptoms of the same underlying nutritional or hormonal imbalance.
Brain fog has multiple potential causes spanning nutritional, hormonal, metabolic, and lifestyle domains — many of which are straightforwardly identifiable through blood tests.
These blood markers are the most clinically relevant when investigating the biochemical causes of brain fog.
Several common conditions have brain fog as a primary or prominent symptom and are detectable through routine blood testing.
A step-by-step approach to investigating brain fog ensures the most common correctable causes are not overlooked.
Note the pattern of brain fog — whether it is constant or fluctuates, worsens after meals, correlates with sleep quality, or accompanies other symptoms such as fatigue or mood changes.
Diets low in B12 (e.g. vegan or vegetarian diets), poor sleep, high alcohol intake, and chronic stress are common contributors and should be assessed alongside physical markers.
A targeted panel including B12, folate, ferritin, TSH, vitamin D, HbA1c, and CRP can identify the most frequently reversible biochemical causes of brain fog within 24–48 hours.
If blood results are normal and symptoms persist, review by a neurologist or cognitive specialist may be warranted to exclude structural or neurodegenerative causes.
Private blood tests analysed by UK-accredited laboratories, with clear results and optional GP review.
Check your vitamin B12 and folate levels with a simple home fingerstick test. Ideal for vegans, those on metformin.
Measure the EPA and DHA content of your red blood cell membranes — the most reliable indicator of your long-term omega-3 status. Simple fingerstick test.
Measure your 25-OH vitamin D level with a simple home fingerstick kit. Results reviewed by a GMC-registered physician and returned in 3 to 5 working days.
A ten-marker panel combining full thyroid function and autoimmune antibodies with key nutritional serum biomarkers — serum vitamin D, ferritin, active B12.
A 28-biomarker advanced panel covering full blood count, thyroid (TSH, FT4), extended liver and kidney function, full cholesterol, HbA1c, iron status, and CRP.
Lifestyle factors significantly influence cognitive clarity and can worsen or trigger brain fog independently of any underlying condition.
While most brain fog is caused by reversible factors, certain accompanying features warrant urgent medical assessment.
These can point to a more serious underlying cause and should not be ignored.
Yes — vitamin B12 deficiency is one of the most common and underdiagnosed causes of brain fog in the UK. B12 is essential for maintaining the myelin sheaths that insulate nerve fibres; without adequate B12, nerve signal transmission slows, resulting in mental cloudiness, poor memory, and difficulty concentrating. Vegans, vegetarians, and older adults absorbing less B12 from food are particularly at risk. A simple blood test can confirm deficiency.
Yes — cognitive slowing is a hallmark of hypothyroidism. Thyroid hormones regulate the metabolic activity of neurons; when thyroid output is insufficient, brain cells produce less energy and cognitive function slows perceptibly. Patients often describe it as thinking through cotton wool. A TSH blood test is the standard screen and can be included in a broad energy and cognitive panel.
The most informative blood tests for brain fog include vitamin B12, folate, TSH and Free T4, ferritin, vitamin D, HbA1c, and CRP. Together these markers cover the major nutritional, hormonal, metabolic, and inflammatory causes. Trupoint Health’s Energy & Fatigue Screen and B Vitamin Energy Panel address the most common culprits.
Yes — the brain depends almost exclusively on glucose for fuel, but fluctuating or chronically elevated blood sugar impairs cerebral energy metabolism. Insulin resistance means glucose cannot enter brain cells efficiently, leading to the cognitive dips many people notice after high-carbohydrate meals. HbA1c provides a three-month average of blood sugar and is a useful screening tool even in people not yet diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
If lifestyle is already well-managed and brain fog persists, a subclinical biochemical imbalance is likely. Common culprits include borderline hypothyroidism (TSH within the lab normal range but suboptimal), low ferritin without frank anaemia, or early insulin resistance. These are only detectable through blood testing and are frequently missed on standard GP panels that do not include ferritin or HbA1c.
This page is for general information only and does not replace personalised medical advice. If you are worried about your health, please speak to a qualified healthcare professional. Trupoint Health blood tests are analysed by UK-accredited laboratories.
Private blood tests analysed by UK-accredited laboratories, with clear results and optional GP review.