Perfil lipÃdico: cómo interpretar tus valores de colesterol
Respuesta rápida: El perfil lipÃdico estándar (Lipid Panel) mide colesterol total (CT), colesterol LDL (LDL-C), colesterol HDL (HDL-C) y triglicéridos (TG). Rangos ideales: CT <200mg/dL, LDL-C <100mg/dL (en alto riesgo cardiovascular <70mg/dL), HDL-C hombres >40mg/dL, mujeres >50mg/dL (>60mg/dL es factor protector), TG <150mg/dL. El LDL-C es el indicador central del riesgo cardiovascular: por cada 1mmol/L (~39mg/dL) de reducción del LDL-C, los eventos cardiovasculares graves se reducen ~22%. El colesterol no-HDL (CT menos HDL-C) puede ser mejor predictor que el LDL-C solo. Modificaciones del estilo de vida: reducir grasas saturadas y trans, aumentar la fibra soluble (avena, legumbres), ejercicio regular (sube el HDL), pérdida de peso. El tratamiento farmacológico de primera lÃnea son las estatinas (Statins). Se recomienda realizar un perfil lipÃdico cada 4-6 años a partir de los 20 años, y con mayor frecuencia en personas de alto riesgo.
Disclaimer: Este contenido es solo informativo y no constituye consejo médico. Aviso legal completo.
What Does Each Number in a Lipid Panel Mean?
A lipid panel provides a snapshot of blood fat levels that influence cardiovascular risk:
- Total cholesterol: Sum of all cholesterol fractions. Desirable: below 200 mg/dL. Less useful than individual components for risk assessment.
- LDL-C (low-density lipoprotein cholesterol): The primary driver of atherosclerosis. Optimal: below 100 mg/dL. For high-risk patients: below 70 mg/dL. For very-high-risk: below 55 mg/dL (2019 ESC/EAS guidelines).
- HDL-C (high-density lipoprotein cholesterol): Often called "good cholesterol" — removes cholesterol from artery walls. Optimal: above 60 mg/dL for cardiovascular protection; below 40 mg/dL (men) or 50 mg/dL (women) is a risk factor.
- Triglycerides: Blood fats from dietary intake and liver production. Normal: below 150 mg/dL. Borderline: 150-199 mg/dL. High: 200-499 mg/dL. Very high: 500+ mg/dL (pancreatitis risk).
- Non-HDL cholesterol: Total cholesterol minus HDL. May be a better predictor of cardiovascular risk than LDL alone because it includes VLDL and remnant particles. Target: LDL goal + 30 mg/dL.
Upload your lipid panel to WAYJET's Medical Report Analyzer for personalized risk interpretation.
What Factors Affect Your Cholesterol Numbers?
Cholesterol levels are influenced by both modifiable and non-modifiable factors:
Non-modifiable:
- Genetics: Family history accounts for 40-60% of cholesterol variability. Familial hypercholesterolemia affects 1 in 250 people, causing very high LDL (above 190 mg/dL) from birth.
- Age and sex: LDL increases with age. Women often see a jump in LDL after menopause due to declining estrogen.
Modifiable factors:
- Diet: Saturated fat intake is the strongest dietary determinant of LDL. Each 1% reduction in saturated fat calories reduces LDL by approximately 1-2 mg/dL. Trans fats are even more harmful — they raise LDL and lower HDL simultaneously.
- Weight: Each 10 kg of weight loss reduces LDL by approximately 8 mg/dL and raises HDL by 3-5 mg/dL.
- Exercise: Regular aerobic exercise raises HDL by 5-15% and modestly reduces triglycerides. The effect on LDL is minimal without dietary changes.
- Alcohol: Moderate intake raises HDL but also raises triglycerides. Not recommended as a cardiovascular strategy.
- Smoking: Lowers HDL by 5-10 mg/dL. Cessation improves HDL within weeks.
When Should You Consider Statin Therapy?
Current guidelines (AHA/ACC 2018) recommend statin therapy for four primary groups:
- Clinical ASCVD: Anyone with established cardiovascular disease (prior heart attack, stroke, peripheral artery disease) — high-intensity statin regardless of LDL level
- LDL above 190 mg/dL: High-intensity statin regardless of other risk factors (likely familial hypercholesterolemia)
- Age 40-75 with diabetes: Moderate-intensity statin; high-intensity if 10-year ASCVD risk exceeds 7.5%
- Age 40-75 with elevated risk: 10-year ASCVD risk 7.5%+ by pooled cohort equations — moderate-to-high intensity statin after risk discussion
Statin efficacy is well-established: a 2019 Lancet meta-analysis of 27 major trials found each 1 mmol/L (39 mg/dL) reduction in LDL decreased major cardiovascular events by 22% and all-cause mortality by 10%.
Lifestyle alternatives for borderline cases include the portfolio diet (plant sterols, nuts, viscous fiber, soy protein), which reduces LDL by 25-35% — approaching low-dose statin levels. Red yeast rice contains natural lovastatin but has variable potency and the same interaction profile as statins.
Preguntas frecuentes
Do you need to fast before a lipid panel?
Recent guidelines have shifted: the 2016 EAS/EFLM consensus statement found fasting and non-fasting lipid panels are equally valid for cardiovascular risk assessment. Triglycerides increase modestly (up to 25 mg/dL) after eating, but this does not significantly change risk classification for most people. Many labs now accept non-fasting samples. Ask your doctor about their preference.
Is high HDL always good?
Generally yes, but extremely high HDL (above 100 mg/dL) may paradoxically be associated with increased cardiovascular risk in some genetic contexts. A 2022 study in JAMA Cardiology found very high HDL was associated with increased all-cause mortality. The relationship between HDL and health appears to be U-shaped rather than linear. HDL between 40-80 mg/dL is considered the optimal range.
How often should cholesterol be checked?
Adults aged 20+ should be screened every 4-6 years if low risk. After age 40, or with risk factors (family history, diabetes, smoking, obesity), annual testing is recommended. If on statin therapy, check 4-12 weeks after starting and at least annually thereafter. Children should be screened once between ages 9-11 per AAP guidelines.
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