All symptoms

By symptom

High cholesterol concern.

Your last lab flagged it. You want a second opinion before you take a statin.

What’s actually going on

How I think about this.

Most “high cholesterol” conversations in conventional care use the wrong markers and reach the wrong conclusion. The standard panel reads total cholesterol, LDL-C, HDL-C, and triglycerides. That is not enough information to make a real decision about your cardiovascular risk, and it leads physicians to prescribe statins to people who don't need them and miss the patients who actually do.

The marker that matters is ApoB, the count of every atherogenic particle in your bloodstream. Two people with identical LDL-C can have completely different ApoB and completely different risk. ApoB has outperformed LDL-C in every head-to-head trial for fifteen years, and it is the marker every modern cardiology guideline now uses to drive treatment decisions. Most primary care offices still don't order it.

Lp(a) is the other missing marker. It is genetic, measured once in your life, and dramatically reshapes risk when elevated. About 20% of the population has high Lp(a) and most have no idea.

The treatment decision is also more nuanced than “statin or no statin.” The right read tells me whether your number is driven by particle count, particle size, dietary intake, insulin resistance, thyroid drift, or inflammation. Each of those calls for a different intervention.

The physician’s lens

How I read this in practice.

I read cholesterol as one piece of a cardiovascular system that includes ApoB, Lp(a), particle size, hsCRP, homocysteine, fasting insulin, HbA1c, blood pressure measured properly, and the full thyroid panel. The metabolomic panel catches the upstream nutrient and oxidative-stress patterns. The number is meaningless without that context, and it is also fixable with that context.

What I’d test first

The data that explains it.

Cholesterol decisions need ApoB above all else. Then Lp(a), genetic, measured once. Then the advanced lipid subfractions, insulin, inflammation, and thyroid. The cardiometabolic panel reads all of this from a single draw.

While you wait

Moves worth making before testing.

These are the levers I’d pull while we set up the workup. Most of them produce real signal inside two weeks.

  1. Get an ApoB and Lp(a) before you make any decision about a statin. Most primary care offices don't order them. Ask.
  2. Lift heavy and add zone 2 cardio. Both shift the particle count favorably.
  3. Cut refined carbohydrates and ultra-processed foods for two weeks. Triglycerides move first; the rest of the panel follows.
  4. Check your fasting insulin. Insulin resistance is upstream of the lipid pattern most physicians treat as the problem.

If two weeks of the basics doesn’t move the needle, that is exactly the kind of presentation a Precision Call exists for. Your biology is telling you something the lifestyle layer cannot fix on its own.

Start here

Want me to read your data?

A complimentary 30-minute call by phone or video with me. You tell me what is going on. I tell you how I would approach it. You decide if I am the right physician for you.