Doctor's Assessment Included
Every result includes a professional assessment from a BIG-registered doctor. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
Cholesterol/HDL Ratio: Insight Into Your Heart Risk
The cholesterol/HDL ratio is your total cholesterol divided by your HDL. A lower ratio points to a more favourable profile and a lower cardiovascular risk. Learn what your value can mean.
Reference Ranges
Reference ranges may vary between laboratories. When you order a test, a BIG-registered doctor assesses your personal results in context. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
What It Measures
The cholesterol/HDL ratio is your total cholesterol divided by your HDL cholesterol. It is not a separate measurement but a ratio the lab calculates from two values already determined in your blood.
The number summarises at a glance how your 'unfavourable' and 'favourable' cholesterol relate to each other. HDL helps remove cholesterol from your blood vessels, so the more HDL you have relative to your total cholesterol, the lower the ratio.
A lower ratio points to a more favourable cholesterol profile. The value is always assessed together with your individual cholesterol results.
Why It Matters
The cholesterol/HDL ratio is a useful summary of your cardiovascular risk. Two people with the same total cholesterol can have a very different risk depending on their HDL. The ratio captures that difference.
A higher ratio means there is relatively little protective HDL compared with the rest of your cholesterol. This is associated with a higher long-term risk of artery narrowing and cardiovascular disease.
Because it is a ratio, it can be favourable even when one individual value sits just outside its range, or the other way around. That is why your doctor always looks at your whole lipid profile.
When to Test
The cholesterol/HDL ratio is included when you have a cholesterol or lipid profile. This is often done during a general health check, when there is an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, or to monitor a previously found abnormality.
The ratio is also useful for tracking the effect of lifestyle changes or medication, because it reflects both a drop in 'unfavourable' cholesterol and a rise in HDL.
For a reliable lipid profile you are sometimes asked to fast; follow the instructions provided with your test.
Symptoms
Low Levels
High Levels
Lifestyle Tips
The same habits that raise your HDL and lower the rest of your cholesterol improve your ratio. Regular exercise, not smoking, a fibre-rich diet with unsaturated instead of saturated fats and a healthy weight all have an effect.
Keep alcohol moderate and watch saturated fat and sugars. A one-off result says less than the trend over time; discuss a raised ratio with your doctor, who looks at your full risk profile before changing anything about lifestyle or medication.