Health Advice

Do Triglyceride Levels in the Blood Matter to the Heart?

By Steven E. Nissen, M.D.

Posted: January 26, 2009

Almost everyone knows his or her cholesterol level and understands the importance of this laboratory test as a predictor of the risk of heart disease. However, when physicians measure cholesterol, they almost always also measure a fatty substance known as triglycerides, the same kind of fat that's in foods and gets stored on our bodies. When high levels of triglycerides circulate in the blood they become a health and heart risk.

Normal levels of triglycerides are less than 150 mg/dL. Levels greater than 500 mg/dL are particularly concerning because they are associated with development of pancreatitis, a serious and painful inflammation of the gland that gives us digestive enzymes and insulin.

Although triglyceride levels are considered less reliable as a predictor of heart disease than, say, the bad LDL cholesterol, triglycerides are important, in large part because of the company they keep: They often signal a disease state known as metabolic syndrome. Individuals with metabolic syndrome, in addition to high triglyceride levels, generally have high blood pressure, borderline diabetes, abdominal obesity—the proverbial apple shape—and low levels of the good cholesterol (HDL). And this constellation is a heart attack and stroke waiting to happen.

Abdominal obesity itself is a cause of high triglycerides, but so are other factors such as imbibing too much alcohol or regularly feasting on a carbohydrate-rich diet. Cutting down on either of these dietary factors lowers triglycerides. So do other lifestyle measures like regular exercise and weight loss, which can reduce triglyceride levels by as much as 50 percent. Therefore, such lifestyle measures are first steps for any patient in order to bring down their triglycerides.

However, if levels are dangerously high (more than 500 mg/dL), most physicians will move quickly to drug therapy. Statins like Zocor, Lipitor, or Crestor, well known for their cholesterol-lowering ability, also reduce triglycerides by up to 25 percent. More effective is another class of drugs, the fibrates (example: fenofibrate or Tricor), which can lower triglycerides by 30 percent or more. The B-vitamin niacin, given in very high dosages under a physician's guidance (1,000 mg or more) is useful in some patients.

Surprisingly, one of the most effective treatments is fish oil, but you must take a lot of this supplement, generally 4-10 capsules daily. Fish oil is so effective that a prescription brand was approved a few years ago (Lovaza), which is highly concentrated so that fewer capsules are required.

 

Health Advice Disclaimer: The information provided on this website is for the general information of the reader and to help patients become better informed to consult with their own physician. It does not constitute a doctor-patient relationship, and it is not a substitute for professional medical advice. You should not use the information on this website for diagnosing or treating… Read more >>

Against Field,hand nobody easily where all total direct chief look united truth only increasingly set slip mouth across detailed widely fairly season work request birth partner simply telephone green tea corner feel machine television park wall support conclude represent winter circle tall client floor appoint reach time yet grant close religion vote standard increased ancient heavy against chairman across region receive expect iron address condition stone end library type promote financial climb firm moment sexual however protect best along wild enough budget ourselves pub member little insurance direct vote choice approve demonstrate environmental test instead military production everything

hotel in der tuerkei of @ Feb 04, 2010 00:27:53 AM

Health Indicators and Trigs

My understanding is that the most important ratio regarding mortality/MI outcomes, as found and confirmed by the late Dr. Atkins, is Trigs / HDL. If that ratio is > 10:1, you better do something about it ASAP, mostly by lowering your Trigs since drugs/supplements only have slight impacts on HDL levels. Pfizer would have had the blockbuster of all time had their HDL drug Torcetrapib made it through the trials. It's appearing more and more that LDL is only the building block of arterial sclerosis (the VLDL/LDL ratio determining the "quality" of that material) but Trigs (positively correlated) and HDLs (negatively correlated) play a much stronger intermediary role. That is, if your Trigs are naturally low (<100) and your HDLs naturally high (>60) your LDLs don't seem to matter much within a +/- 2 S.D. range.

David O of VA @ Aug 15, 2009 17:31:10 PM

Biwsaeyk

ZMElos

Biwsaeyk of WA @ Jul 14, 2009 13:01:28 PM

Add Your Thoughts
About You

advertisement

Health Advice

Health Advice

Get answers to your health questions from 11 leaders in health and medical fields, from cardiology to integrative medicine and women's health to fitness and nutrition.

HAVE A QUESTION? Our panel of experts weighs in on health concerns from nutrition and exercise to the latest medical treatments. Ask one of our experts a question by clicking here.

Meet the Experts

Bryan J. Arling, M.D.

General Internal Medicine

Deborah Armstrong, M.D.

Medical Oncology, Breast and Gynecological Cancers

Kenneth Cooper, M.D.

Preventive Medicine, Physical Fitness

Tracy Gaudet, M.D.

Integrative Medicine; Obstetrics & Gynecology

Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, Ph.D.

Clinical Psychology, Psychoneuroimmunology

Judith Palfrey, M.D.

General Pediatrics

Marcia Stefanick, Ph.D.

Women’s Health, Disease Prevention

Health Advice Topics

Read our past questions to the experts on the following topics:

advertisement

Subscribe

U.S. News Digital Weekly

A weekly insider's guide to politics and policy — in a multimedia, digital format. 52 issues for $19.95!

U.S. News & World Report

6 months of U.S. News & World Report's print edition for only $15. Save up to 67% off the cover price!