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Annual Check-Ups for Men

Most men don’t go to the doctor because they “feel fine”,  until something changes: energy drops, recovery takes longer, or subtle signs start showing up.

 

That’s why our Men’s Check-Ups are organized by life stage. Being 35 is not the same as being 55 — and your body doesn’t experience it the same way either. We offer three options depending on where you are and what you want to evaluate.

 

 

Male Check-Up

Recommended starting at age 30.

This check-up is your starting point: confirm everything is on track or identify what needs adjustment early.

 

 

Extended Male Check-Up

Recommended from ages 40 to 59.

This evaluation is designed to detect what tends to develop silently, because health and performance aren’t guesses — they’re monitored.

 

 

Elderly Male Check-Up

Recommended for 60 and older.

This check-up is designed to provide more comprehensive monitoring and to anticipate what may progress with age.

 

 

Explore the list and select the check-up that fits you to view the full details.

Male Check Up

This check-up is designed to maintain the health of the king of the house.

Illustrative art from Cozumel
  • Hospitals where it applies: Cozumel, Playa del Carmen*, Tulum* , Puerto Morelos*
  • Validity:  As of December 31, 2025
  • Applies to the General Public
  • Includes:
    • Basic labs: CBC, Glucose, Urea, Creatinine, and Urinalysis
    • Total Prostate-Specific Antigen (blood test)
    • At Costamed Hospitals in Playa del Carmen, Tulum, and Puerto Morelos, a Transvesical Ultrasound is included.
    • *Specialist consultation:
      • Cozumel: Urology
      • Playa del Carmen: General Surgery
      • Tulum & Puerto Morelos: Internal Medicine (Puerto Morelos via Telemedicine)
  • Price: 
    • $2,600 MXN Cozumel
    • $2,775 MXN Playa del Carmen
    • $2,515 MxN Tulum
    • $2,765 MXN Puerto Morelos

 

What is it for?

  • Assesses prostate (PSA and size), urinary tract, and kidney function.
  • Useful as an annual checkup for men ≥40 or when urinary symptoms are present.
  • Detects early prostate, kidney, and metabolic issues.

 

Common uses

  • Early detection of prostate cancer and evaluation of benign prostatic hyperplasia.
  • Urinary tract review for urgency, weak stream, or nighttime urination; renal and metabolic assessment.
  • Surgical consult if findings indicate a need (prostate, hernia, or other).

 

Preparation — Lab

  • Fast 8–12 hours (water only); avoid high-fat foods, alcohol, and strenuous exercise for 24 hours; do not smoke.
  • Ask if any medication should be paused—do not stop meds without medical advice.
  • PSA: avoid ejaculation and cycling for 48 hours beforehand.
  • Urinalysis (UA): cleanse the genital area; collect a midstream sample in a sterile container (first morning urine preferred); deliver within 2 hours and close tightly. Samples that are insufficient, contaminated, deteriorated, improperly collected, spilled, or in a non-sterile container may be rejected.

 

Preparation — Imaging

*Only in Playa del Carmen, Tulum and Puerto Morelos

  • 6-hour fast and full bladder: drink 3–4 glasses of water 1 hour before and do not urinate.
  • Wear comfortable, two-piece clothing.
  • Inform staff of any prior abdominal surgeries.

 

Medical consultations

  • Arrive with your lab and imaging results.
  • Report urinary symptoms, pain, family history, and current medications.
  • Come prepared to discuss questions or schedule any additional tests if needed.

 

Take the next step for your health

Book through the form. Our front desk will reach out to confirm your appointment and assist you along the way.

 

 

 

 

Extended Male Check Up

After 40, life often runs in “handle everything” mode: work, family, responsibilities, travel, quick meals, normalized stress. And while you hold it all together, your body does the same — it adapts.

 

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: many conditions don’t start with pain. They start with small shifts.


The fatigue that’s now “just who you are.” Sleeping eight hours and waking up just as tired. The waistline that settled in even though you swear you eat the same. Changes in libido you blame on stress. That occasional shortness of breath that comes and goes. Nothing dramatic. Just subtle signals that, together, deserve a smart pause.

If your phrase is, “I feel fine, but…,” here that “but” turns into data.


This check up exists for that reason: to put numbers behind your health and give you control before decisions become urgent.

 

 

What This Check Up Is — and Who It’s For

The Extended Male Check Up (40+) is a comprehensive preventive evaluation designed to assess prostate, hormonal, metabolic, kidney, and respiratory health — with medical interpretation and an annual follow-up approach.

 

It does not promise definitive diagnoses or cures. It’s about identifying signals, organizing the picture, and making informed decisions.

 

This check up is for you if:

  • You’re 40+ and want an annual health review with clear data.
  • You want to evaluate prostate health and testosterone with medical criteria.
  • You relate to fatigue, weight gain, energy changes, sexual dysfunction, or muscle loss.
  • You have a family history of diabetes, high blood pressure, or cardiovascular events.
  • You’re preparing for surgery or want a general evaluation due to urinary symptoms or abdominal discomfort.

 

What It May Help Detect Early

  • If your blood sugar is rising (even if you feel “normal”).
  • If your cholesterol or triglycerides require adjustment.
  • If there are early warning signs in kidney function or urinalysis.
  • If your heart shows electrical signals at rest that need attention.
  • If your prostate requires closer monitoring.
  • If your hormonal profile suggests reviewing habits, sleep, and follow-up.

 

What’s Included

  • Internal Medicine Consultation
  • Basic Health Lab Panel: Complete Blood Count (CBC), Glucose, Urea, Creatinine, and Urinalysis
  • Uric Acid
  • Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c)
  • Lipid Panel
  • PSA (Prostate-Specific Antigen)
  • Total Testosterone
  • Chest X-ray (single view)
  • Resting Electrocardiogram (EKG)

View the preparation guide for your check up here.

 

 

Make it simple: leave your details and we’ll help you schedule.

Turn your check up into your annual health habit.

 

 

 

What This Check Up May “Shine a Light On” in Men 40+

 

1) Prediabetes and Type 2 Diabetes

This occurs when the body begins managing blood sugar less effectively, and levels remain elevated over time. A significant portion of adults live with diabetes or prediabetes — and many are unaware.

Why it goes unnoticed: Early stages may not cause clear symptoms.
How the check up helps: Glucose and HbA1c can suggest both current and sustained elevation.

 

2) High Cholesterol and Triglycerides

These blood fats increase cardiovascular risk.

Why it goes unnoticed: It doesn’t hurt and often has no symptoms.
How the check up helps: The lipid panel provides a direct measurement to guide timely action.

 

3) High Blood Pressure and Cardiovascular Risk

Hypertension can slowly damage blood vessels, heart, and kidneys.

Why it goes unnoticed: It often progresses silently.
How the check up helps: The consultation integrates vital signs and history; the EKG may provide indirect signals, and the metabolic profile adds context.

 

4) Early Signs of Kidney Disease

Kidney function can decline without noticeable symptoms.

Why it goes unnoticed: When symptoms appear, it’s often late.
How the check up helps: Urea, creatinine, and urinalysis may suggest early monitoring.

 

5) Prostate Health (Growth and Risk Monitoring)

Prostate cancer is among the most common cancers in men.

Why it goes unnoticed: It can begin without pain or obvious changes.
How the check up helps: PSA may guide monitoring or further evaluation, interpreted by Internal Medicine.

 

Elderly Male Check Up

This check-up is designed for older men seeking to rule out hidden conditions.

Illustrative art from Playa del Carmen
  • Hospitals where it applies: Cozumel, Playa del Carmen, Tulum and Puerto Morelos*
  • Validity: As of Decembres 31, 2025
  • Applies to the General Public
  • Includes:
    • Complete Blood Count (CBC)
    • Fasting Blood Glucose
    • Urea
    • Creatinine
    • Urinalysis (EGO)
    • Total Cholesterol
    • Triglycerides
    • Uric Acid
    • Fecal Occult Blood Test (FOBT)
    • Total Testosterone
    • Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
    • Abdominal Ultrasound
    • Chest X-Ray
    • Resting Electrocardiogram (ECG)
    • Internal Medicine Consultation*  (via Telemedicine for Puerto Morelos)
    • Dental Consultation
  • Price: $5,550 MXN ($5, 800 MXN forPuerto Morelos)

 

What is it for?

  • High-coverage men’s checkup: prostate, metabolic, cardiac, thyroid, digestive, and overall health.
  • Detects chronic diseases, hormonal changes, and cardiovascular risk factors.
  • Guides annual follow-up and preventive decisions.

 

Common uses

  • Timely detection of prostate cancer/BPH (PSA).
  • Review of cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose, uric acid, and cardiovascular risk.
  • Preventive digestive screening (fecal occult blood) and assessment of symptoms in older adults.

 

Preparation — Lab

  • Fast 8–12 hours (water only); avoid high-fat foods, alcohol, tobacco, and strenuous exercise for 24 hours; do not smoke before the test.
  • PSA: avoid sexual activity, prostate examination, and cycling for 48 hours beforehand.
  • Medication: ask if any drugs should be paused—do not stop without medical advice.
  • Urinalysis (UA): cleanse the genital area; collect a midstream sample in a sterile container (first morning urine preferred); deliver within 2 hours and seal tightly. Samples that are insufficient/contaminated/deteriorated/improperly collected/spilled or in a non-sterile container may be rejected.
  • Fecal occult blood: for 3 days prior, avoid red meat and derivatives (cold cuts, extracts), and leafy/root vegetables such as beets or radishes. Do not take iron, vitamin B12, or liver extracts. Avoid aspirin and vitamin C. On day 4, collect a walnut-sized stool sample in a clean, dry, sterile container; cap tightly and take it promptly to the lab.

 

Preparation — Imaging

  • Abdominal ultrasound: minimum 6-hour fast and moderately full bladder (drink 3–4 glasses of water 1 hour before; do not urinate).
  • Chest X-ray: no fasting; avoid lotions or perfumes; wear clothing without metal.
  • Electrocardiogram (ECG): sleep well; avoid coffee, energy drinks, and smoking for 4 hours beforehand; no creams on the chest; wear comfortable clothing.

 

Medical consultations

  • Bring your lab and imaging results.
  • Share current symptoms, family history, medications, and lifestyle.
  • Come ready to discuss questions or receive additional guidance.

 

Stay proactive about your health

Schedule through the form. Our front desk will contact you to confirm your visit and provide friendly assistance.