A standard cholesterol panel is a blurry snapshot of heart risk. It can read normal while the things that actually drive heart attacks, the number of cholesterol particles, an inherited risk factor, and arterial inflammation, sit unmeasured. A short, well-chosen set of blood tests gives you a far sharper picture, and most of them are inexpensive.
Here are the markers worth ordering if heart disease is your concern, whether you have a family history, a borderline cholesterol result, or you simply want the clearest read available.
The single best blood test for heart risk. It counts the actual cholesterol particles that lodge in artery walls, catching the roughly 1 in 4 people whose standard LDL looks fine but whose real risk is high.
An inherited risk factor you test once in your life. About 1 in 5 people carry a high level, which raises heart attack and stroke risk on its own. If it is high, it changes how hard you manage everything else.
A read on low-grade inflammation, the process that turns stable plaque into a rupture. It adds risk information that cholesterol alone cannot.
An amino acid that, when elevated, is linked to higher cardiovascular risk and is often easy to lower with B vitamins.
The main protein on HDL particles, a more direct read on the protective side of cholesterol than HDL alone.
A clotting protein that, when high, reflects both inflammation and a greater tendency to form the clots behind heart attacks.
The share of omega-3 in your red blood cells, a modifiable marker tied to cardiovascular and overall mortality.
Particle-level heart risk for anyone who wants to get cardiovascular risk right. It starts from your standard cholesterol panel, then goes where a checkup will not: the particles that actually drive plaque, the inherited risk you measure once in a lifetime, and the inflammation and clotting that turn stable plaque into an event.
Want a different mix? Build your own in the Test Library, or answer three quick questions if you are not sure where to start.
If anything here comes back abnormal, it is a reason to act early, not to panic. Most of these markers respond to the same handful of changes, and the inherited one, Lp(a), simply tells you how much the others are worth.