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Jelly Roll is riding high on the wave of success this year. His career hit a peak with three Grammy awards in February 2026, followed by a feature in Men’s Health that not only showcased his incredible 275-pound weight loss but also delved into his transformative journey. Yet, it wasn’t just the impressive before-and-after photos that caught the public’s attention. It was the startling revelations about his health struggles before embarking on this path.
During his initial consultation at the wellness clinic Ways2Well, Jelly Roll’s blood test results were alarming, even to the experienced medical team. His insulin levels were alarmingly high, his testosterone was at a mere 57 — akin to that of a young boy, he explained. Elevated cholesterol and a dangerously high A1C level, indicating poor blood sugar control over recent months, were also concerning. These findings led to a diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes, necessitating medication, and he also began testosterone replacement therapy.
“The first few results were mind-boggling,” he shared with Men’s Health.
However, the real takeaway from his story isn’t the shock value. It’s about a profound change in perspective. “The focus was never just on shedding pounds,” he reflected. “It was about understanding what was going on inside my body.”
What Standard Bloodwork Often Misses and Why Jelly Roll’s Was Comprehensive
Jelly Roll’s clinic didn’t just run the basics. Ways2Well founder Brigham Buhler described their approach to Men’s Health: “If you have high blood pressure, you’re going to be given high blood pressure medication, right? Why is your blood pressure high? You have to peel back the layers and figure out what’s causing it.”
That layered approach uncovered that excessive insulin was forcing Jelly Roll’s body to store fat, a metabolic issue that standard bloodwork might never have flagged. Most annual physicals include a CBC (complete blood count) and CMP (comprehensive metabolic panel), which cover blood cell health, kidney and liver function, electrolytes and a single glucose reading. Those are valuable, but they don’t always catch what’s building beneath the surface.
The Bloodwork Tests Similar to Jelly Roll’s That Are Worth Asking For
Each of Jelly Roll’s alarming markers connects to something your own doctor can check.
A1C captures your average blood sugar over 2-3 months rather than a single moment. Below 5.7% is normal, 5.7-6.4% is prediabetes and 6.5%+ indicates diabetes. The CDC recommends everyone over 45 get a baseline, and the 2026 ADA Standards of Care updated screening guidance in January.
Fasting insulin isn’t part of standard panels but can flag insulin resistance years before A1C becomes abnormal. This is exactly what caught Jelly Roll’s metabolic issues early.
Testosterone ranges from roughly 300-1,000 ng/dL in adult men and 15-70 ng/dL in women. Jelly Roll’s was 57. While the conversation around low T tends to focus on men, women need it too. Low testosterone in women can contribute to fatigue, reduced muscle mass, low libido and difficulty maintaining bone density, especially during and after menopause. Regardless of gender, it’s never included automatically in standard bloodwork and must be specifically requested.
Lipid panel measures your HDL, LDL and triglycerides. A baseline between ages 35-40 is recommended unless family history suggests earlier screening.
Thyroid (TSH) is another commonly overlooked test. Thyroid disorders affect roughly 1 in 10 women, and about 60% of those affected don’t know it.
What You Can Do at Your Next Appointment
Don’t just accept “everything looks normal” without asking which specific tests were actually run. Standard panels may skip A1C, fasting insulin, testosterone and thyroid entirely.
Write down your family history of diabetes, heart disease and obesity before your visit. This can qualify you for additional testing that insurance is more likely to cover. If something comes back borderline, ask about retesting in three to six months rather than waiting a full year.
If you want specific panels without a doctor’s order, Labcorp and Quest both offer direct-to-consumer testing, though insurance typically won’t cover those.
Jelly Roll didn’t hide from his numbers. At the peak of his career, he chose to look inward first. That decision likely saved his life, and the same curiosity about what’s happening inside your own body is available to anyone willing to ask the right questions at their next appointment.

