Understanding Your Lipid Panel



脂质组 is a blood test that measures cholesterol and other fat-related substances in your blood. It is one of the most commonly ordered blood tests because it is the standard way to assess your risk of cardiovascular disease — including heart attack and stroke — and to monitor the effects of treatment intended to reduce that risk.

This article explains what each component of a lipid panel measures, what your results mean for your cardiovascular health, and how the results are used to guide treatment decisions.


适用于您检测结果的参考范围以实验室报告上打印的参考范围为准,而非此处所示的典型范围。不同实验室的参考范围可能有所不同。 结果会根据所用设备、受检人群以及年龄、性别和妊娠状况等个体因素而有所不同。请务必将您的结果与报告上打印的参考范围进行比较,并与您的医生讨论任何异常结果。

A note on lipid targets versus reference ranges: Lipid results are unusual among blood tests in that they are typically interpreted against treatment targets rather than population-based reference ranges. The numbers used to describe “desirable,” “borderline,” or “high” values reflect levels associated with low or high cardiovascular risk in research studies, not laboratory equipment-based normal ranges. Different professional organizations also use slightly different cutoffs. The targets shown in this article are widely used but should be considered approximate guides only — your doctor will interpret your results in the context of your overall cardiovascular risk.


什么是脂质?

Lipids are fatty substances that the body uses for energy storage, to build cell membranes, and to make hormones. They cannot dissolve in water (and therefore in blood), so they travel through the bloodstream packaged inside particles called 脂蛋白. Lipoproteins have a fatty core and a protein-rich outer layer that allows them to mix with blood.

The lipid panel measures cholesterol and triglycerides — the two main types of fats in the blood — and reports them broken down by the lipoproteins that carry them:

  • 胆固醇 is a waxy fat-like substance used to build cell membranes and to make hormones, vitamin D, and bile acids. The body needs cholesterol, but too much in the blood — particularly the wrong type — increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.
  • 甘油三酯 are the body’s main form of stored fat. They circulate in the blood after meals and are used as fuel between meals.

Why is a lipid panel done?

The lipid panel is ordered for many reasons related to cardiovascular health:

  • For cardiovascular risk screening. The lipid panel is the standard way to estimate the risk of future heart attack or stroke. Most adults have their lipids checked periodically as part of routine health care, with the frequency depending on age, family history, and other risk factors.
  • To investigate symptoms or signs of cardiovascular disease. Patients with chest pain, a previous heart attack or stroke, or known coronary artery disease have lipids checked as part of evaluation and ongoing care.
  • 监测治疗情况。 When patients are treated with cholesterol-lowering medications such as statins, lipid panels are used to track how well the medication is working and whether dose adjustments are needed.
  • To evaluate other conditions affecting lipids. Diabetes, hypothyroidism, kidney disease, and certain medications can all affect lipid levels and may prompt lipid testing.
  • For family screening. People with a strong family history of early heart disease or with relatives diagnosed with familial hypercholesterolemia may be screened earlier and more often.

测试是如何进行的?

A lipid panel is performed on a small blood sample, usually drawn from a vein in the arm. Traditionally, the test was done after a 9-to-12-hour fast (water only) because triglyceride levels rise significantly after meals. More recent guidelines from professional cardiology societies have moved toward accepting non-fasting lipid panels for routine screening, since non-fasting results are similarly useful for predicting cardiovascular risk and are easier for patients to obtain. Fasting is still typically required when:

  • Triglycerides are likely to be very high
  • The lipid panel is being used to monitor specific treatment targets
  • Your doctor specifically requests a fasting test

Your doctor or laboratory will tell you whether to fast. If you are unsure, fasting is the safer default.


Components of the lipid panel

总胆固醇

Total cholesterol is the sum of all cholesterol carried in the blood, including LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and a fraction carried in other lipoproteins. It is a useful overall measure but should not be interpreted on its own — the breakdown into LDL and HDL provides much more information about cardiovascular risk.

Typical interpretation:

  • 低于 200 毫克/分升 — desirable
  • 200–239 毫克/分升 — borderline high
  • 240 mg/dL or above — high

A high total cholesterol can mean elevated LDL (“bad” cholesterol), elevated HDL (“good” cholesterol), or both. Looking only at total cholesterol can be misleading — for example, someone with very high HDL may have a high total cholesterol but actually have a favourable cardiovascular profile.

低密度脂蛋白(LDL)胆固醇

LDL cholesterol is often called “bad cholesterol” because high levels are strongly associated with the buildup of fatty deposits called plaques in the walls of arteries — a process called atherosclerosis. Plaques can narrow or block arteries, causing heart attacks, strokes, and peripheral artery disease.

LDL is the main target of cholesterol-lowering medications. The optimal LDL level depends on your overall cardiovascular risk:

  • 低于 100 毫克/分升 — generally considered optimal for low-risk adults
  • 低于 70 毫克/分升 — typical target for adults with diabetes or known cardiovascular disease
  • 低于 55 毫克/分升 — may be the target for patients at very high cardiovascular risk, such as those with recurrent cardiovascular events
  • 100–129 毫克/分升 — near optimal
  • 130–159 毫克/分升 — borderline high
  • 160–189 毫克/分升 — high
  • 190 mg/dL or above — very high; may suggest familial hypercholesterolemia, an inherited condition causing high LDL from birth

Causes of high LDL:

  • 高饱和脂肪和反式脂肪饮食
  • Obesity, particularly with abdominal weight gain
  • 久坐不动的生活方式
  • 吸烟
  • 2型糖尿病
  • 甲状腺功能减退症
  • 肾脏疾病
  • Certain medications, including corticosteroids and some antiretroviral drugs
  • Familial hypercholesterolemia, an inherited condition
  • Pregnancy (a temporary rise is normal)

Causes of low LDL:

  • 降胆固醇药物,例如他汀类药物
  • 甲状腺功能亢进症
  • Severe liver disease (the liver makes most of the body’s cholesterol)
  • 消化不良
  • Certain inherited conditions

Most laboratories calculate LDL from the other lipid measurements rather than measuring it directly. When triglycerides are very high, the calculation becomes inaccurate and a direct LDL measurement may be needed.

高密度脂蛋白(HDL)胆固醇

HDL cholesterol is often called “good cholesterol” because higher HDL levels are associated with lower cardiovascular risk. HDL particles help remove cholesterol from blood vessels and transport it to the liver, where it can be processed and removed from the body.

Unlike most blood tests, with HDL higher is generally better:

  • 60 mg/dL or above — protective; associated with lower cardiovascular risk
  • 40–59 毫克/分升 (men) or 50–59 毫克/分升 (women) — average; not protective but not a major risk factor
  • 低于 40 毫克/分升 (men) or 低于 50 毫克/分升 (women) — low; a cardiovascular risk factor

Causes of low HDL:

  • 吸烟
  • Obesity, particularly abdominal obesity
  • 久坐不动的生活方式
  • Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome
  • Very high triglycerides
  • Certain medications, including some beta-blockers and anabolic steroids
  • Inherited conditions affecting HDL metabolism

Causes of high HDL:

  • 有规律的有氧运动
  • Moderate alcohol intake (though this is not a recommended way to raise HDL because of other health risks of alcohol)
  • Genetics — some people naturally have high HDL
  • Certain medications, including niacin (rarely used now), estrogens, and fibrates

One important caveat: extremely high HDL levels (above about 80 mg/dL) may not provide additional cardiovascular benefit and, in some cases, may indicate dysfunctional HDL particles. The cardiovascular benefit of HDL appears to plateau, and very high levels do not confer extra protection.

非高密度脂蛋白胆固醇

Non-HDL cholesterol is calculated by subtracting HDL from total cholesterol. It represents all the cholesterol in atherogenic (artery-clogging) lipoproteins — including LDL, VLDL, and others — and is increasingly used as a single comprehensive measure of “bad” cholesterol.

Non-HDL is particularly useful when triglycerides are elevated, since it captures cholesterol carried in triglyceride-rich particles that LDL alone misses. It is also useful in non-fasting samples.

典型目标:

  • For most adults: 低于 130 毫克/分升
  • For people with diabetes or known cardiovascular disease: 低于 100 毫克/分升
  • For very high-risk patients: 低于 80 毫克/分升

甘油三酯

Triglycerides are the body’s main form of stored fat. They circulate in the blood, especially after meals, and are stored in fat tissue for later use as energy. Very high triglyceride levels are an independent cardiovascular risk factor and, when severe, can also cause acute pancreatitis.

Typical interpretation (fasting values):

  • 低于 150 毫克/分升 — desirable
  • 150–199 毫克/分升 — borderline high
  • 200–499 毫克/分升 — high
  • 500 mg/dL or above — very high; significantly increases the risk of pancreatitis and may need urgent treatment

Causes of high triglycerides:

  • Recent food intake (which is why fasting is preferred for triglyceride testing)
  • Diet high in refined carbohydrates, sugar, or alcohol
  • 肥胖
  • Type 2 diabetes, particularly when poorly controlled
  • 代谢综合征
  • 甲状腺功能减退症
  • 肾脏疾病
  • Certain medications, including corticosteroids, some diuretics, beta-blockers, estrogens, and some antiretroviral drugs
  • Pregnancy (a temporary rise is normal)
  • Familial hypertriglyceridemia, an inherited condition

Causes of low triglycerides:

  • 甲状腺功能亢进症
  • 营养不良或吸收不良
  • Certain medications including fibrates and high-dose omega-3 fatty acids
  • 遗传条件

How are lipid results used to guide treatment?

Lipid results are not interpreted in isolation. Your doctor will combine your results with other risk factors — including age, sex, blood pressure, smoking status, diabetes, family history, and known cardiovascular disease — to estimate your overall risk of having a heart attack or stroke in the next ten years. Tools such as the Framingham Risk Score, the ASCVD Risk Estimator, or the QRISK calculator (depending on country) are commonly used.

This combined risk estimate, rather than any single lipid number, drives treatment decisions:

  • 改变生活方式 — including weight management, increased physical activity, dietary changes (more vegetables, less saturated fat, less refined sugar, less alcohol), and smoking cessation — are recommended for everyone with abnormal lipids and are the first step for people at lower risk.
  • 药物 — most commonly statins — are typically added when overall cardiovascular risk is elevated, when LDL is very high (suggesting familial hypercholesterolemia), or when a patient already has cardiovascular disease or diabetes.
  • Other lipid-lowering medications — including ezetimibe, PCSK9 inhibitors, bempedoic acid, fibrates, and omega-3 prescription medications — may be added in specific situations, such as when statins alone are insufficient or not tolerated.

The goal of treatment is not simply to make the numbers look better; it is to reduce your real-world risk of heart attack, stroke, and other cardiovascular events.


What happens after a lipid panel?

If your lipid results are favorable and your overall cardiovascular risk is low, no immediate action is usually needed beyond continuing healthy lifestyle habits. Repeat testing is recommended periodically, with timing determined by age and risk.

If your results are abnormal, your doctor will discuss the findings and recommend next steps, which may include:

  • 重复测试。 A single abnormal result is not always conclusive. Repeating the test (often after lifestyle changes have been tried) is common before starting medication.
  • Calculate your overall cardiovascular risk. Your doctor will combine your lipid results with other risk factors to estimate your 10-year cardiovascular risk.
  • Test for secondary causes. If lipid abnormalities are unexpectedly severe or do not fit the clinical picture, additional tests may be ordered to look for underlying causes such as thyroid dysfunction, kidney disease, diabetes, or liver disease.
  • Consider familial hypercholesterolemia. An LDL above 190 mg/dL, particularly with a family history of early heart disease, may prompt genetic testing or referral to a lipid specialist.
  • Recommend lifestyle changes. Diet, exercise, weight management, and smoking cessation can produce meaningful improvements in lipid levels.
  • Start cholesterol-lowering medication. Based on your overall risk, a statin or other lipid-lowering medication may be recommended.
  • 请咨询专科医生。 Patients with very abnormal lipids, suspected genetic lipid disorders, or difficult-to-control levels may be referred to a lipid specialist or cardiologist.
  • Schedule follow-up testing. Lipid panels are typically repeated 4–12 weeks after starting or changing a lipid-lowering medication, then less frequently once levels are stable.

问你的医生的问题

  • Were any of my lipid results outside the desirable range?
  • Based on my full risk profile, what is my 10-year risk of heart attack or stroke?
  • What LDL target should I aim for, given my personal risk?
  • Should I make lifestyle changes first, or do I need medication now?
  • If I am taking a statin or other lipid-lowering medication, is it working as well as it should?
  • Do my results suggest a possible inherited cholesterol disorder?
  • Should my children or other family members be tested?
  • Are any of my medications affecting my lipid results?
  • How often should I have my lipids rechecked?

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