How to Read Cholesterol Results
(And Why They Don’t Tell the Whole Story)
Last Updated: June 2026 ⬩ Written by Dr. Kevin Passero, N.D. ⬩ Practicing Naturopathic Physician
Last Updated: June 2026
Written by Dr. Kevin Passero, N.D.
Practicing Naturopathic Physician

TL;DR — Key Takeaways
- A standard cholesterol test does not tell you enough to assess your true cardiovascular risk.
- ApoB measures lipoprotein particle number—a more accurate risk predictor than LDL alone.
See study → - The triglyceride-to-HDL ratio reveals insulin resistance, a major amplifier of cardiovascular risk.
See study → - hs-CRP measures inflammation—which determines how likely cholesterol is to cause arterial damage.
See study → - Two people with identical LDL levels can have very different cardiovascular risk profiles.
What Your Cholesterol Results Actually Mean
The short answer:
Cholesterol results should not be interpreted as isolated numbers.
True cardiovascular risk depends on how those markers interact with
metabolic health, inflammation and overall physiology.
Your lab report gives you a handful of numbers.
What it doesn't give you is context—and context is everything.
LDL alone does not determine risk. Neither does total cholesterol.
What matters is what those numbers reveal about the biological environment they exist within:
Your lab report gives you a handful of numbers.
What it doesn't give you is context — and context is everything.
LDL alone does not determine risk. Neither does total cholesterol. What matters is what those numbers reveal about the biological environment they exist within:
- How many lipoprotein particles are circulating
- Whether arterial inflammation is present
- How effectively your body is regulating blood sugar and energy
Together, these factors shape your overall risk.
This is why two people with identical cholesterol results can have very different outcomes—
and why interpreting your results requires looking beyond the standard lipid panel.
In this article, you’ll learn:
- What Your Doctor Didn’t Tell You About Cholesterol
- Cholesterol Numbers Explained: LDL, HDL and Triglycerides
- Key Cholesterol Markers Explained
- How to Interpret Your Cholesterol Results
- Questions to Ask Your Doctor After a Cholesterol Test
- What Is a Good LDL Level?
- Why Cholesterol Results Can Be Misleading
- Why Cholesterol Requires a Multi-Pathway Approach
- Frequently Asked Questions
What Your Doctor Didn’t Tell You About Your Cholesterol Results
What Your Doctor Didn’t Tell You
About Your Cholesterol Results
If you’ve had your cholesterol tested, you were likely given a simple interpretation:
Your cholesterol is high. Or your cholesterol looks good. And that was the end of the conversation.
What’s missing is the context that determines what those numbers actually mean for your long-term health.
Cholesterol is one of the most misunderstood topics in modern medicine. Some perspectives treat LDL as the singular most important cardiovascular risk factor, while others minimize its role entirely. Neither reflects what we consistently see in clinical practice or in the broader body of research.
LDL is an important risk factor—but it is only one piece of a much larger system.
When you evaluate total cholesterol or LDL in isolation, you risk missing the underlying conditions and other factors that determine whether it becomes harmful.
To truly understand your results, you have to look beyond the surface of a standard lipid panel.
Cholesterol Numbers Explained: LDL, HDL and Triglycerides
When people search for “cholesterol numbers explained,” they’re really asking what those numbers mean inside the body.
A standard lipid panel provides measurements, but not interpretation.
Total cholesterol is often treated as the most important number, yet clinically it offers the least insight. It’s simply a combined total of lipoproteins and does not distinguish between protective and harmful patterns.
LDL is commonly labeled “bad cholesterol,” but this is an oversimplification. LDL is a transport system that delivers cholesterol to cells for essential functions. The issue arises when LDL interacts with a damaged arterial environment and contributes to plaque formation.
Most lab reports measure LDL-C, which reflects how much cholesterol is being carried—not how many particles are carrying it. That distinction is critical.
HDL, often called “good cholesterol,” helps transport cholesterol away from tissues, but higher levels do not guarantee cardiovascular protection. Function matters more than quantity.
Triglycerides, often overlooked, are one of the most revealing markers. Elevated levels are closely tied to insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction—two major drivers of cardiovascular risk.
All together, these numbers provide a starting point—but not the full picture.
Key Cholesterol Markers Explained
These are the core markers measured on a standard lipid panel—
and what each one actually represents in your body.
These are the core markers measured on a standard lipid panel—and what each one actually represents in your body.
How to Interpret Your Cholesterol Results (Beyond the Numbers)
How to Interpret Your Cholesterol Results
(Beyond the Numbers)
These markers don’t work in isolation—your risk depends on how they interact
within your metabolic and inflammatory environment.
Marker | What It Tells You | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
LDL | Cholesterol being transported in the blood | Risk depends on particle number, |
HDL | Cholesterol transport away from tissues | Function matters more than absolute levels |
Triglycerides | Energy metabolism and fat processing | Strong indicator of insulin resistance and |
ApoB | Total number of atherogenic particles | One of the most accurate predictors of |
hs-CRP | Level of inflammation in the body | Higher inflammation increases likelihood of |
5 Questions to Ask Your Doctor After a Cholesterol Test
Most patients leave their appointment with a number and no context.
These questions will help you understand what your results actually mean.
Most patients leave their appointment with a number and no context. These questions will help you understand what your results actually mean.
1. What is my ApoB—not just my LDL?
ApoB measures the total number of particles that can contribute to plaque formation. Two people with the same LDL can have very different ApoB levels—and very different risk. If your doctor hasn’t ordered it, ask for it specifically.
2. What is my triglyceride-to-HDL ratio?
Divide your triglycerides by your HDL. A ratio under 2 is generally favorable. A ratio above 3 is a stronger warning sign than elevated LDL alone—and is closely associated with insulin resistance and a shift toward smaller, more atherogenic LDL particles.
3. Do I have signs of insulin resistance?
Insulin resistance quietly shifts your lipid profile toward higher risk—raising triglycerides, lowering HDL and promoting smaller, more dangerous LDL particles. It often goes undetected on a standard panel. Fasting glucose, fasting insulin, and the triglyceride-to-HDL ratio can all provide early signals.
4. What is my hs-CRP level?
This inflammation marker reveals whether your arterial environment is vulnerable. High LDL in a low-inflammation environment carries very different risk than the same LDL level alongside elevated hs-CRP. It’s one of the most informative markers that rarely gets discussed.
5. What do these numbers actually mean—beyond whether they're in range?
Reference ranges show where you fall relative to an average—they don't account for your particle number, inflammation, metabolic health or family history. Being "in range" doesn't always mean low risk. Ask your doctor what your results mean for your specific situation, not just how they compare to a population benchmark.
What Is a Good LDL Level? (And Why It Depends)
There is no universal “ideal” LDL level. Standard reference ranges classify below 100 mg/dL as optimal, 100–129 mg/dL as near optimal, and 130 mg/dL or above as warranting closer attention. But these thresholds don’t account for particle number, inflammation or metabolic health—which means a “normal” LDL can still carry meaningful risk depending on your broader health picture.
Nearly half of cardiovascular events occur in people with normal cholesterol levels. See study →
Why? Because cardiovascular risk is driven by arterial damage.
When the arterial lining is compromised—by inflammation, high blood sugar, elevated blood pressure or other factors—LDL becomes far more likely to penetrate and contribute to plaque formation.
This is why the same LDL level can mean very different things in different individuals.
Context is not a footnote—it is the determining factor.

Why Cholesterol Results Can Be Misleading
Standard cholesterol tests only show part of the picture. Two people can have the same LDL number—but very different heart risk. That difference comes down to factors most basic tests don’t measure.
- Particle count matters.
Think of LDL like cars on a highway. The more particles you have, the more chances they have to damage your arteries. ApoB is the best way to measure how many of these particles are actually circulating. - Metabolic health matters.
Your triglyceride-to-HDL ratio gives insight into how well your body is handling blood sugar. When this ratio is off, it often signals deeper metabolic issues that LDL alone won’t catch. - Inflammation matters.
Even “normal” cholesterol can be risky if your arteries are inflamed. A marker called hs-CRP helps show whether your body is in a state that makes damage more likely. - Blood sugar control matters.
When your body struggles to manage blood sugar (insulin resistance), it can raise triglycerides, worsen cholesterol patterns, and gradually damage blood vessels over time.
That’s why looking at LDL or total cholesterol alone can be misleading—it can either cause unnecessary worry or give a false sense of security.
Why Cholesterol Requires a Multi-Pathway Approach
After 20 years and reviewing thousands of cholesterol panels, one pattern became clear: focusing on a single number rarely produces optimal outcomes.
The patients who improve the most consistently are the ones who address the underlying drivers at the same time, not in isolation.
That’s what led me to take a multi-pathway approach in my practice.
At this point, we’ve talked about particle count, metabolic health, inflammation and blood sugar—but what’s important to understand is that all of these risk factors are connected.
Elevated triglycerides and poor blood sugar control tend to drive higher LDL particle counts and put significant stress on the lining of the arteries. Chronic inflammation increases oxidative stress, making those particles more dangerous. Over time, these underlying processes reinforce each other, working together to jeopardize the health of our cardiovascular system.
This is why the most effective approach isn’t to chase a single marker, like LDL, it’s to address the multiple pathways that influence all of them at once.
And this is where foundational habits make a measurable impact:
- Nutrition: Diets rich in fiber, polyphenols and healthy fats help reduce cholesterol absorption, improve insulin sensitivity, lower inflammation and support more favorable lipid patterns.
- Blood sugar control: Minimizing refined carbohydrates and stabilizing glucose levels can significantly lower triglycerides and improve LDL particle size and number.
- Weight and metabolic health: Even modest improvements in body composition and increases in physical activity can positively shift ApoB and particle count.
- Inflammation: Sleep, stress management and nutrient-dense foods all play a role in lowering inflammatory signaling that contributes to vascular damage.
When these various pathways are all optimized simultaneously, you’re not just improving one number—you’re influencing the entire environment that determines cardiovascular health.
That’s what a true multi-pathway approach looks like in practice. Once that foundation is in place, the next step is asking a practical question:
How do we further support these same pathways in a more targeted way?
While nutrition, movement and metabolic health can move the needle significantly, certain aspects of cholesterol regulation can be harder to fully optimize through lifestyle alone.
This is where targeted nutritional compounds can play a meaningful role, helping extend that same multi-pathway strategy into areas that are otherwise harder to influence.
That’s why I created Durable CHOLESTEROL COMPLETE® built on the same protocol I’ve used in my clinics.
It combines clinical-grade ingredients at the dosages used in human trials—including citrus bergamot, red yeast rice, CoQ10, olive leaf and vitamin C—each selected for the role it plays in supporting cardiovascular health.
These ingredients have each been studied for their effects on lipid balance, metabolic function and cardiovascular markers in human research. See studies →
In my experience, when this approach is applied consistently, many patients see measurable improvements in their lab markers over time, including:
In my experience, when this approach is applied consistently, many patients see measurable improvements in their lab markers over time, including:

- Lower total cholesterol
- Lower LDL
- Increased HDL
- Lower triglycerides
- Healthy blood flow
- Lower inflammation markers
- Better blood sugar regulation
And I stand behind Durable CHOLESTEROL COMPLETE so strongly, it’s backed by a full 365-day “Better Labs or Your Money Back” guarantee.
Learn more about Durable CHOLESTEROL COMPLETE here.


- lower total cholesterol and LDL
- increased HDL
- lower triglycerides
- healthy blood flow
- lowers inflammation markers
- better blood sugar regulation
And stand behind CHOLESTEROL COMPLETE so strongly, it’s backed by a full 365-day “Better Labs or Your Money Back” guarantee.
Frequently Asked Questions About Cholesterol Results
About the Author
Dr. Kevin Passero, N.D.
Practicing Naturopathic Physician ‧ Chief Science Officer, Durable
Dr. Kevin Passero, N.D., is a practicing naturopathic physician with over 20 years of clinical experience in metabolic and cardiovascular health. He specializes in identifying the underlying drivers of conditions like high cholesterol, blood pressure and insulin resistance through a systems-based approach.
He has helped thousands of patients better understand their cholesterol results and develop personalized strategies to support heart health through nutrition, lifestyle and targeted supplementation.
Dr. Passero is also the Co-founder and Chief Science Officer of Durable, where he leads the development of clinically informed formulations designed to support cardiovascular and metabolic health.





