Heart (Cardiovascular)
Heart attacks and strokes rarely come with warning signs — they strike after years of silent damage to your arteries. Blood tests measuring cholesterol particles, inflammatory markers, and clotting factors can detect cardiovascular risk long before symptoms appear. This window of opportunity lets you make targeted lifestyle changes and prevent irreversible damage. Your bloodstream reflects the true state of your vascular health.
Total Cholesterol
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Total cholesterol measures all cholesterol in your blood. Testing helps assess cardiovascular risk and guides treatment decisions to prevent heart disease and stroke.
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HDL Cholesterol
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HDL is the “good” cholesterol that removes harmful cholesterol from arteries. Higher HDL levels are associated with lower cardiovascular disease risk and better heart health.
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LDL Cholesterol
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LDL is the “bad” cholesterol that causes artery plaque buildup. Lowering LDL reduces heart attack and stroke risk — it’s the primary target of cholesterol treatment.
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Total Cholesterol / HDL Ratio
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The total cholesterol to HDL ratio compares harmful and protective cholesterol in one number. A lower ratio indicates better cardiovascular health and reduced heart disease risk.
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Triglycerides
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Triglycerides are blood fats that store energy. High levels increase cardiovascular risk and can cause pancreatitis. Testing guides lifestyle changes and treatment decisions.
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High-Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein (hs-CRP)
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You can’t feel chronic inflammation, but it’s quietly damaging your blood vessels and accelerating aging. hs-CRP reveals this hidden fire — and unlike cholesterol, it responds quickly to lifestyle changes, showing results within weeks.
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Apolipoprotein A-I (ApoAI)
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ApoA-I is the main protein of HDL that enables its protective functions. Testing measures cardiovascular protection and, combined with ApoB, provides the powerful ApoB/ApoA-I risk ratio.
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Apolipoprotein B (ApoB)
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ApoB measures the number of artery-clogging particles in your blood. It may predict cardiovascular risk better than LDL cholesterol, especially when standard lipid results are discordant.
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Apolipoprotein B / A-I Ratio
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The ApoB/ApoA-I ratio captures cardiovascular risk in one number — comparing particles that build plaque versus particles that remove cholesterol. Lower is better, and lifestyle changes can significantly improve your ratio.
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Apolipoprotein C-II (Apo-CII)
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ApoC-II activates the enzyme that clears triglycerides from blood. Deficiency causes severe hypertriglyceridemia and pancreatitis risk — testing identifies this rare but treatable genetic condition.
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Apolipoprotein C-III (Apo-CIII)
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ApoC-III inhibits triglyceride clearance and increases cardiovascular risk. Testing helps evaluate hypertriglyceridemia, and new ApoC-III-lowering therapies are transforming treatment options.
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Apolipoprotein E (ApoE)
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ApoE genotype affects cholesterol levels, cardiovascular risk, and Alzheimer’s disease susceptibility. This one-time genetic test provides lifelong insights for both heart and brain health planning.
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Lipoprotein (a)
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Lp(a) is a genetic cardiovascular risk factor that standard cholesterol tests miss. One-time testing reveals this inherited risk, enabling aggressive prevention of heart disease and stroke.
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Non-HDL Cholesterol
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Non-HDL cholesterol captures ALL bad cholesterol in one number — LDL plus VLDL and remnants. It predicts cardiovascular risk better than LDL alone, especially with elevated triglycerides.
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LDL Small
Small dense LDL particles are the most dangerous type of LDL cholesterol. Testing reveals hidden cardiovascular risk when standard LDL looks normal but particle quality is poor.
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The average physician tests only 19 biomarkers.
Pin includes over 100 tests to give you the 360-degree picture of your health.