Apo B & A1: The Particle Count That Matters

LDL cholesterol tells you how much cholesterol is in your blood. Apolipoprotein B tells you how many dangerous particles are carrying it. More particles = more collisions with artery walls = more plaque.

1-2
Days for
results
Better
Predictor than
LDL alone
Ratio
ApoB/A1 =
Risk Index
🧬
RECOMMENDED

Apolipoprotein Assessment (Test Code: 216010)

Get both Apo B and Apo A1 in a single test, plus the ApoB:ApoA1 ratio — a powerful risk indicator that many studies show correlates better with heart disease than standard cholesterol panels.

Understanding Apolipoproteins

🔬 Apo B vs. Apo A1: The Good and Bad Carriers

⚠️ Apolipoprotein B (Bad)

  • • Main protein on LDL, VLDL, and other atherogenic particles
  • • One ApoB molecule per particle — counts total atherogenic particles
  • • High levels = more particles = more artery damage
  • • Target: <90 mg/dL (or <80 for high-risk patients)

✅ Apolipoprotein A1 (Good)

  • • Main protein on HDL (protective) particles
  • • Helps remove cholesterol from artery walls
  • • Higher levels = better reverse cholesterol transport
  • • Low levels linked to increased heart disease risk

📊 Why ApoB Beats LDL-C

  • LDL-C measures cholesterol content, not particle count
  • Two people with same LDL-C can have vastly different risk
  • Small, dense LDL particles carry less cholesterol but are more dangerous
  • ApoB captures ALL atherogenic particles, not just LDL

👤 Who Should Test

  • Family history of premature heart disease
  • Metabolic syndrome or type 2 diabetes
  • High triglycerides (makes LDL-C less accurate)
  • Already on statins — to verify treatment effectiveness

🎯 The Ratio Advantage

  • ApoB/ApoA1 ratio integrates good and bad markers
  • Studies show it predicts heart disease better than any single lipid
  • Useful when cholesterol results seem "normal" but family history is concerning
  • May reveal hidden risk in seemingly healthy patients

📊 Apolipoprotein B Reference Ranges

Category Range (mg/dL) Interpretation
Desirable <90 Optimal for most adults
Borderline High 90 – 99 May need intervention depending on other risk factors
High 100 – 130 Elevated risk — lifestyle changes and/or medication recommended
Very High >130 Significantly elevated risk — discuss treatment with physician

For high-risk patients: Target ApoB <80 mg/dL (or <70 for extreme risk). High-risk includes prior cardiovascular events, familial hypercholesterolemia, or multiple risk factors.

🩸 Test Preparation & Requirements

Fasting Required? Yes — 12-14 hours fasting
Specimen Type Serum (preferred) or plasma
Volume Needed 2 mL
Turnaround Time 1-2 business days
Test Code (ApoB only) 167015
Test Code (Assessment) 216010 (includes ApoB, A1, ratio)

Note: Please state patient's sex on the test request form (required for Apolipoprotein Assessment). Specimens from non-fasting patients may be rejected.

Get the Full Picture

Standard cholesterol tests miss up to 50% of heart attack victims who have "normal" numbers. Apolipoprotein testing reveals what cholesterol tests hide.

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