Leo reached across to take the blood sample with only a slight wrinkling of his nose before he glanced down at Loki. His brow pinched even more at the expression there. The kid was listening to them, eyes examining them each in turn before they would return to Jemma's little tubes filling with dark red. Fitz decided he didn't like that Loki was subtly observing such private transactions, even if he knew Coulson had surely spoken too quiet to be heard. The phone conversation certainly had not been.
He pulled up the old record and started the filter, while two more bars unfolded from around the table and scanned over the boy. Layers of skin, flesh, and bone started filtering on the screen. Fitz was letting the blood filter and the computer diagnose while he started pointing out physical features.
"Well, right off, the non-biological items are gone." He froze a frame and pointed. "The crystals aren't there, the wire, the key--even his hapless little spoon is no longer there. Uh... Wisdom teeth haven't come in yet. Uh, Simmons, you're better at this part. Um, that's--this body hasn't undergone the proximal epiphysis fusion, has it? Course I'm not sure when growth plates stop with his species. Um." The rest was likely harder to follow as he and Simmons fell into FitzSimmons speech, tossing phrases back and forth concerning the immediate differences.
He looked over at the machine as it beeped. He immediately dragged a new screen up. "The cells are still morphing after being separated from the host, but not how they used to. Look. I have video even of the old record." He pulled a holograph screen close for comparison. "It looks different. Not quite as..." He searched for the right word. "Purply?"
Then the other machine beeped and the scientist agent immediately pulled up another screen and pushing the others to the side. Then he scrolled a vast amount of data, highlights automatically occurring between the differences in the genetic markers. "OH, now that! That's a close match, but..." He pointed awkwardly at some of the sets, then nodded to Jemma's analysis as she talked about the genes more specifically.
He looked at Coulson and tried to translate. "There are significant differences, but, um, this is still a closer match than what we'd see from a parent to child. Much closer, even. We just--these anomalies in the code are less easy to explain. It might be just him being in a morphed state?" He looked to Simmons for her input.