Common abnormal Bangkok check-up findings — and what they typically mean
What specific flagged results mean and the usual level of urgency:
- ▸High LDL cholesterol: very common; not an emergency; start lifestyle changes and discuss statin therapy with cardiologist; same-day cardiologist consultation available ฿1,500–฿3,000
- ▸High fasting glucose or HbA1c: suggests prediabetes or diabetes; not emergency; retest to confirm if only mildly elevated; endocrinologist consultation ฿1,500–฿3,000
- ▸High blood pressure (one reading): one high reading may be anxiety or transient; not diagnostic on its own; repeat after rest; 24-hour ABPM ฿2,000–฿3,500 to confirm
- ▸Fatty liver on ultrasound (Grade 1–2): extremely common (30–40% of executive check-ups); lifestyle modification recommended; not an emergency
- ▸Thyroid abnormality (TSH high or low): usually managed with medication; thyroid ultrasound ฿1,500–฿2,500 to check for nodules; endocrinologist same-day available
- ▸Elevated cancer marker (PSA, CA-125, CEA, AFP): a mildly elevated marker often has benign causes; does NOT confirm cancer; requires specialist follow-up to investigate
- ▸Anaemia (low haemoglobin/haematocrit): iron deficiency very common, especially in women; usually managed with iron supplements; further blood tests to find cause
- ▸Abnormal ECG: most ECG 'abnormalities' are normal variants; a cardiologist review of the ECG print is often all that's needed; echocardiogram ฿4,000–฿8,000 if cardiologist advises
- ▸Abnormal kidney function (elevated creatinine): may be transient dehydration; retest after hydration; nephrologist if persistently abnormal
- ▸Gallstones on ultrasound: extremely common incidental finding; if asymptomatic, often conservatively managed; surgeon consultation ฿1,500–฿3,000
When to see a specialist in Bangkok before you fly home
Green, yellow, and red flags — what warrants same-day action in Bangkok vs waiting until home:
- ▸ACT SAME-DAY IN BANGKOK (red flags): chest pain or pressure, difficulty breathing, severe headache with high BP (>180/120), sudden vision change, very high glucose (>400 mg/dL with symptoms), rapidly growing lump, platelet count <50,000 with bleeding, haemoglobin <7 g/dL with symptoms — these require hospital emergency or urgent specialist
- ▸BOOK SPECIALIST BEFORE FLYING (yellow flags — book within 24–48 hours): elevated PSA or CA marker with no baseline; thyroid nodule on ultrasound (TIRADS 4 or 5); ovarian cyst >5cm complex; significantly abnormal ECG with symptoms; creatinine >2.0 consistently; persistent high BP >160/100
- ▸MONITOR AND FOLLOW UP AT HOME (green flags — safe to fly and follow up with home GP): mildly elevated cholesterol or blood sugar (first finding, no symptoms); Grade 1–2 fatty liver; simple kidney cysts (Bosniak I/II); small thyroid nodules (TIRADS 1–3); mild anaemia; Vitamin D deficiency; minor ECG variations
- ▸How to book a Bangkok specialist same-day: go to any major hospital international patient centre (Bumrungrad, Samitivej, Bangkok Hospital, BNH) and explain what was flagged — they can usually arrange specialist review within 2–6 hours
- ▸Cost of Bangkok specialist consultation: ฿1,500–฿4,000 depending on department; usually 20–40% of equivalent private consultation in the US, UK, or Australia
What to take home from Bangkok after an abnormal finding
Comprehensive checklist of documents and materials to bring home for follow-up:
- ▸Full laboratory report (PDF): request by email from the hospital; all major Bangkok international hospitals provide this; keep a copy on your phone
- ▸Doctor's written summary: the check-up doctor's assessment at the end of the report is your most important document — it notes which findings require follow-up
- ▸Imaging files (DICOM): for any CT, MRI, or ultrasound — request a CD or USB stick; your home radiologist or specialist can read DICOM files directly; Bumrungrad and Samitivej offer cloud download option
- ▸Radiologist report in English: a written English-language interpretation of any imaging; ask the hospital's radiology department
- ▸Specialist consultation note: if you saw a specialist in Bangkok, ask for a printed English consultation summary — this is what your home GP needs to continue your care
- ▸Medication: if Bangkok prescribed a medication (statin, antihypertensive, thyroid), buy 1–3 months supply from hospital pharmacy; generic Bangkok prices are 50–80% lower than home pharmacy prices
- ▸Follow-up plan: ask the Bangkok check-up doctor to write a clear 'what to do next' note — specifically: what tests to repeat and when, what specialist to see at home, what to watch for as warning signs
- ▸Bangkok hospital contact: save the hospital's email or WhatsApp — many Bangkok private hospitals (especially Bumrungrad, Samitivej) offer telemedicine follow-up or can answer questions via email after you've left