Doctor's Assessment Included
Every result includes a professional assessment from a BIG-registered doctor. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
Non-HDL Cholesterol: Insight Into Your Risk
Non-HDL cholesterol is your total cholesterol minus your HDL. It captures all the unfavourable cholesterol types together and is a reliable cardiovascular risk marker. 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
Non-HDL cholesterol is your total cholesterol minus your HDL cholesterol. It is not a separate measurement but a number the lab calculates that captures all the 'unfavourable' types of cholesterol together, including LDL and VLDL.
Where an LDL value measures only LDL, non-HDL sums up all the cholesterol that can contribute to artery narrowing. This gives a more complete picture of the part of your cholesterol that can burden your blood vessels.
A lower non-HDL value is more favourable. The value is assessed together with your other lipid results.
Why It Matters
Non-HDL cholesterol is regarded by many guidelines as a better predictor of cardiovascular risk than LDL alone, because it includes all the artery-narrowing particles.
An added advantage is that non-HDL stays reliable when you are not fasting. LDL is often calculated and can become inaccurate with high triglycerides or after a meal; non-HDL is far less affected by this.
A raised non-HDL value is associated with a higher risk of artery narrowing and cardiovascular disease. Your doctor always assesses the value in the context of your full risk profile.
When to Test
Non-HDL cholesterol is included in a lipid profile, for example during a general health check, with an increased cardiovascular risk, or to monitor treatment.
The value is especially useful when your triglycerides are high or when your sample was taken non-fasting, because non-HDL is then more reliable than a calculated LDL.
Because non-HDL does not depend on fasting, this value can also be assessed reliably from a non-fasting sample.
Symptoms
Low Levels
High Levels
Lifestyle Tips
What lowers your LDL and triglycerides also lowers your non-HDL: a fibre-rich diet with unsaturated instead of saturated fats, regular exercise, not smoking, moderate alcohol and a healthy weight.
Discuss a raised non-HDL value with your doctor, who looks at your full risk profile. With a high risk, a lower target may apply than the general reference shown on your result.