Heart Health & Cholesterol - Comprehensive Lab Panel
The Heart Health & Cholesterol Comprehensive Lab Panel includes 37 tests and 148 biomarkers to review cholesterol, ApoB, Lp(a), lipoprotein particles, inflammation, insulin resistance, blood sugar, kidney risk, thyroid function, liver health, omega status, CoQ10, homocysteine, and cardiovascular wellness. Includes lipid panel, Cardio IQ, Lp-PLA2, MPO, OxLDL, hs-CRP, proBNP, troponin, A1c, insulin, cystatin C, urine albumin, and thyroid markers.
- $6,176.25
- $1,248
- Save: 79.79%
The following is a list of what is included in the item above. Click the test(s) below to view what biomarkers are measured along with an explanation of what the biomarker is measuring.
Also known as: Microalbumin Random Urine with Creatinine
Creatinine, Random Urine
Microalbumin
Microalbumin/Creatinine
Apolipoprotein A1
Apolipoprotein B
Apolipoprotein B/A1 Ratio
Also known as: Bilirubin Fractionated
Bilirubin, Direct
Bilirubin, Indirect
Bilirubin, Total
Also known as: C-Terminal Insulin, Connecting peptide insulin, CPeptide, Insulin C-peptide, Proinsulin C-peptide
C-Peptide
MYELOPEROXIDASE
Also known as: CBC, CBC includes Differential and Platelets, CBC/PLT w/DIFF, Complete Blood Count (includes Differential and Platelets)
NOTE: Ulta Lab Tests provides CBC test results from Quest Diagnostics as they are reported. Often, different biomarker results are made available at different time intervals. When reporting the results, Ulta Lab Tests denotes those biomarkers not yet reported as 'pending' for every biomarker the test might report. Only biomarkers Quest Diagnostics observes are incorporated and represented in the final CBC test results provided by Ulta Lab Tests.
Absolute Band Neutrophils (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Basophils
Absolute Blasts (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Eosinophils
Absolute Lymphocytes
Absolute Metamyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Monocytes
Absolute Myelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Neutrophils
Absolute Nucleated Rbc (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Promyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Band Neutrophils (Only Reported If Detected)
Basophils
Blasts (Only Reported If Detected)
Eosinophils
Hematocrit
Hemoglobin
Lymphocytes
MCH
MCHC
MCV
Metamyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Monocytes
MPV
Myelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Neutrophils
Nucleated Rbc (Only Reported If Detected)
Platelet Count
Promyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
RDW
Reactive Lymphocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Red Blood Cell Count
White Blood Cell Count
Also known as: CoQ10
Coenzyme Q10
Also known as: Chem 12, Chemistry Panel, Chemistry Screen, CMP, Complete Metabolic Panel, Comprehensive Metabolic Panel CMP, SMA 12, SMA 20
Albumin
Albumin/Globulin Ratio
Alkaline Phosphatase
Alt
AST
Bilirubin, Total
Bun/Creatinine Ratio
Calcium
Carbon Dioxide
Chloride
Creatinine
Egfr African American
Egfr Non-Afr. American
GFR-AFRICAN AMERICAN
GFR-NON AFRICAN AMERICAN
Globulin
Glucose
Potassium
Protein, Total
Sodium
Urea Nitrogen (Bun)
Also known as: CK (Total), CPK, CPK (Total), Creatine Kinase CK Total, Creatine Phosphokinase (CPK), Total CK
Creatine Kinase, Total
CYSTATIN C
eGFR
Ferritin
Also known as: Factor I, Fibrinogen, Fibrinogen Activity Clauss
Fibrinogen Activity,
Also known as: Gamma Glutamyl Transferase GGT, Gamma-Glutamyl Transferase, Gamma-Glutamyl Transpeptidase, Gamma-GT, GGTP, GTP
Ggt
Also known as: A1c, Glycated Hemoglobin, Glycohemoglobin, Glycosylated Hemoglobin, HA1c, HbA1c, Hemoglobin A1c, Hemoglobin A1c HgbA1C, Hgb A1c
HEMOGLOBIN A1C
Also known as: Homocysteine, Homocysteine Cardiovascular
HOMOCYSTEINE,
Also known as: C-Reactive Protein, Cardio CRP, Cardio hs-CRP, CRP, High Sensitivity CRP, High-sensitivity C-reactive Protein, High-sensitivity CRP, Highly Sensitive CRP, hsCRP, Ultra-sensitive CRP
Hs Crp
Also known as: Insulin (fasting)
Insulin
Also known as: Iron and TIBC, Iron and Total Iron Binding Capacity TIBC, TIBC
% Saturation
Iron Binding Capacity
Iron, Total
Also known as: Lipid Panel with Ratios (fasting), Lipid Profile with Ratios (fasting), Lipids
Chol/HDLC Ratio
Cholesterol, Total
HDL Cholesterol
LDL-Cholesterol
LDL/HDL Ratio
Non HDL Cholesterol
Triglycerides
Also known as: Lipoprotein A, Lp (a), Lp(a)
Lipoprotein (A)
Also known as: Ion Mobility, Cardio IQ Lipoprotein Fractionation, Ion Mobility , HDL Subfractions, IDL Subfractions, LDL Subfractions, Lipoprotein Fraction, Lipoprotein Fractionation, Lipoprotein Fractionation Ion Mobility Cardio IQ, Quest Diagnostics has replaced the VAP® Cholesterol Test with Lipoprotein Fractionation, Ion Mobility, Cardio IQ™ test
HDL Large
LDL Medium
LDL Particle Number
LDL Pattern
LDL Peak Size
LDL Small
LP PLA2 ACTIVITY
Magnesium
Methylmalonic Acid
ARACHIDONIC ACID
ARACHIDONIC ACID/EPA
DHA
DPA
EPA
EPA+DPA+DHA
LINOLEIC ACID
OMEGA-3 TOTAL
OMEGA-6 TOTAL
OMEGA-6/OMEGA-3 RATIO
OxLDL
Also known as: BNP, N-terminal pro b-type natriuretic peptide, proBNP Nterminal
Probnp, N Terminal
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D2
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D3
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, Total
Also known as: Free T3, FT3, T3 Free
T3, Free
Also known as: Free T4, FT4, T4 Free
T4, Free
Thyroglobulin Antibodies
Thyroid Peroxidase
Troponin I
Also known as: Thyroid Stimulating Hormone Test, Thyrotropin Test
TSH
Also known as: Serum Urate, UA
Uric Acid
Also known as: UA, Complete, Urinalysis UA Complete, Urine Analysis, Complete
Amorphous Sediment (Only Reported If Detected)
Appearance
Bacteria
Bilirubin
Calcium Oxalate Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Casts (Only Reported If Detected)
Color
Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Glucose
Granular Cast (Only Reported If Detected)
Hyaline Cast
Ketones
Leukocyte Esterase
Nitrite
Occult Blood
Ph
Protein
Rbc
Reducing Substances (Only Reported If Detected)
Renal Epithelial Cells (Only Reported If Detected)
Specific Gravity
Squamous Epithelial Cells
Transitional Epithelial (Only Reported If Detected)
Triple Phosphate Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Uric Acid Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
WBC
YEAST (Only Reported If Detected)
Also known as: Cobalamin, Folic Acid, Vitamin B 12, Vitamin B 12 and Folic Acid, Vitamin B12 Cobalamin and Folate Panel Serum, Vitamin B12/Folic Acid
Folate, Serum
Vitamin B12
Also known as: B6, B6 Vitamin, Pyridoxal, Pyridoxal Phosphate, Pyridoxal Phosphate (PLP), Vitamin B6 Pyridoxal Phosphate
Vitamin B6
The Heart Health & Cholesterol - Comprehensive Lab Panel panel contains 37 tests with 148 biomarkers .
Overview
The Heart Health & Cholesterol Comprehensive Lab Panel is designed for people who want a deep lab-based review of cholesterol, advanced lipoproteins, inherited cardiovascular risk, vascular inflammation, oxidative lipid stress, insulin resistance, kidney and vascular health, thyroid-related cholesterol patterns, liver-metabolic context, omega fatty acid status, and nutrient markers that may support heart health conversations.
Heart health is influenced by more than total cholesterol alone. LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, ApoB, Lipoprotein(a), lipoprotein particle patterns, inflammation, blood sugar, insulin, kidney function, thyroid function, liver health, omega fatty acid balance, B-vitamin status, uric acid, and muscle or cardiac strain markers may all provide useful context.
This Comprehensive panel is the broadest option in the Heart Health & Cholesterol group. It is intended to support a provider-guided cardiovascular risk and cholesterol discussion. It does not diagnose heart attack, heart failure, coronary artery disease, stroke risk, or any cardiovascular condition by itself. Results should be reviewed with age, sex, blood pressure, smoking history, diabetes status, family history, medications, symptoms, imaging history, and clinician guidance.
Why Order This Panel?
The Heart Health & Cholesterol Comprehensive Lab Panel may be helpful for people who want more than a basic cholesterol test and want a broader view of cardiovascular risk-related biomarkers.
This panel may help provide insight into:
- Standard cholesterol and triglyceride patterns
- ApoA1, ApoB, and ApoB-related particle burden
- Lipoprotein(a), an inherited cardiovascular risk marker
- LDL particle number, LDL particle size, and lipoprotein fractionation
- Vascular inflammation and plaque-associated markers
- Oxidized LDL and oxidative lipid stress
- Blood sugar, insulin resistance, and C-peptide patterns
- Kidney filtration and urine albumin patterns
- Thyroid markers that may affect cholesterol
- Liver and bile-flow markers related to lipid metabolism
- B-vitamin, methylation, homocysteine, and MMA patterns
- Omega fatty acid status
- CoQ10 status, especially for statin users or muscle concerns
- proBNP and troponin markers for physician-guided heart strain or cardiac injury context
This Panel May Be Helpful For People With
- High cholesterol
- High LDL cholesterol
- High triglycerides
- Low HDL cholesterol
- Family history of heart disease
- Family history of early heart attack or stroke
- Known elevated Lipoprotein(a)
- Insulin resistance or prediabetes
- Diabetes risk
- Metabolic syndrome concerns
- High blood pressure
- Inflammation concerns
- Thyroid symptoms with cholesterol concerns
- Statin use or muscle symptoms
- Fatty liver or elevated liver enzyme concerns
- Kidney risk or urine albumin concerns
- Interest in a comprehensive heart health baseline
- Desire for deeper cardiovascular biomarker review beyond a standard lipid panel
What This Panel Helps Evaluate
This panel helps evaluate selected biomarkers related to:
- Heart health and cholesterol
- LDL, HDL, triglycerides, and cholesterol ratios
- ApoA1, ApoB, and atherogenic particle burden
- Lipoprotein(a) inherited risk
- Lipoprotein particle size and number
- Vascular inflammation
- Oxidative LDL stress
- Blood sugar and insulin resistance
- Kidney filtration and vascular kidney risk
- Thyroid function and autoimmune thyroid patterns
- Liver and bile-flow context
- Iron storage and iron availability
- Homocysteine and B-vitamin status
- Omega fatty acid status
- CoQ10 and statin-support context
- proBNP and troponin physician-guided cardiac context
Important Cardiac Marker Notice
Troponin I and NT-proBNP/proBNP are not substitutes for emergency evaluation. Troponin is commonly used in medical settings when acute heart injury or heart attack is suspected. NT-proBNP/proBNP may provide heart strain or heart failure-related context. If someone has chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, new severe weakness, jaw/arm pain, or symptoms of a possible heart attack or stroke, they should seek urgent medical care immediately.
Which Tier Is Right for Me?
Essential Lab Panel
The Heart Health & Cholesterol Essential Lab Panel is best for people who want a focused starting point for cholesterol, inflammation, blood sugar, thyroid screening, liver and kidney function, magnesium, and basic blood health.
Choose Essential if you want a practical first step for cholesterol and cardiometabolic risk review.
Advanced Lab Panel
The Heart Health & Cholesterol Advanced Lab Panel is best for people who want deeper insight into ApoB, Lp(a), insulin resistance, C-peptide, kidney/urine vascular risk, B-vitamin and homocysteine patterns, iron status, Free T4, GGT, uric acid, vitamin D, and statin-related muscle context.
Choose Advanced if you have high cholesterol, family history, insulin resistance, high triglycerides, statin use, thyroid concerns, or kidney/cardiometabolic risk.
Comprehensive Lab Panel
The Heart Health & Cholesterol Comprehensive Lab Panel is the broadest option. It includes the Essential and Advanced categories and adds premium cardiovascular markers such as Cardio IQ™ lipoprotein fractionation, Lp-PLA2 activity, MPO, OxLDL, fibrinogen, OMEGACHECK™, CoQ10, Free T3, thyroid antibodies, proBNP, and Troponin I.
Choose Comprehensive if you want the deepest review of cholesterol particle risk, inherited risk, inflammation, oxidative LDL stress, insulin resistance, thyroid-lipid contributors, kidney risk, omega status, and advanced cardiovascular biomarkers.
Tests Included and Why They Matter
Core Cholesterol, Apo Proteins & Lipoprotein Risk
This group evaluates standard cholesterol markers plus advanced lipoprotein markers that can provide deeper cardiovascular risk context than a basic lipid panel alone.
Lipid Panel
The Lipid Panel measures total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and triglycerides.
This test is included because it is the foundation of cholesterol and heart health testing. LDL cholesterol and triglycerides can provide insight into atherogenic cholesterol burden and metabolic health, while HDL cholesterol provides additional cardiovascular context.
Apolipoprotein A1 + B
Apolipoprotein B, or ApoB, reflects the number of atherogenic cholesterol-carrying particles. ApoA1 is the main protein associated with HDL particles.
This test is included because ApoB can provide deeper risk context than LDL cholesterol alone. ApoA1 adds HDL-related transport context, while ApoB helps estimate the number of particles that may contribute to plaque formation.
Lipoprotein(a)
Lipoprotein(a), or Lp(a), is an inherited cholesterol-related marker.
This test is included because elevated Lp(a) can add cardiovascular risk that may not be obvious from a standard lipid panel. Lp(a) is especially useful for people with family history of early heart disease, stroke, high cholesterol, or unexplained cardiovascular risk.
Lipoprotein Fractionation, Ion Mobility, Cardio IQ™
This advanced test evaluates lipoprotein particle patterns, including particle size and particle number.
This test is included because two people with similar LDL cholesterol values may have different LDL particle numbers or particle patterns. Particle testing may provide additional insight into insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome risk, small dense LDL patterns, and advanced cardiovascular risk.
Vascular Inflammation, Plaque Biology & Oxidative Stress
Inflammation and oxidative stress can influence cardiovascular risk, plaque activity, and lipid oxidation. This group provides premium vascular inflammation and oxidative lipid markers.
hs-CRP
High-sensitivity C-reactive protein is a marker of low-grade inflammation.
This test is included because inflammation may provide useful context for cardiometabolic risk, vascular health, metabolic syndrome, and interpretation of other markers such as ferritin.
LP PLA2 Activity
Lp-PLA2 is an enzyme associated with vascular inflammation.
This test is included as a premium cardiovascular marker because it may provide additional context for plaque-associated inflammation and vascular risk discussions. It should be interpreted with lipid markers, hs-CRP, clinical risk factors, and provider guidance.
Cardio IQ® Myeloperoxidase, MPO
MPO is an enzyme associated with white blood cell activity and oxidative processes.
This test is included because MPO may provide additional context for vascular inflammation and oxidative stress. It is best used as part of a broader heart health discussion rather than as a stand-alone risk marker.
OxLDL
OxLDL measures oxidized LDL.
This test is included because LDL oxidation may provide context for oxidative lipid stress, vascular inflammation, and advanced cardiovascular wellness. OxLDL is a premium marker that should be interpreted with standard lipids, ApoB, Lp(a), hs-CRP, and overall cardiovascular risk.
Fibrinogen Activity, Clauss
Fibrinogen is a clotting protein that can also reflect inflammation.
This test is included because fibrinogen may provide context for inflammation, coagulation balance, vascular wellness, and cardiometabolic risk. It is most useful when reviewed with hs-CRP, lipid markers, metabolic health, and provider guidance.
Blood Sugar, Insulin Resistance & Metabolic Heart Risk
Blood sugar and insulin resistance are major contributors to cardiometabolic risk. This group evaluates glucose regulation, insulin production, and metabolic stress patterns.
Hemoglobin A1c
Hemoglobin A1c measures average blood sugar over approximately the past two to three months.
This test is included because diabetes and prediabetes are strongly related to cardiovascular risk. A1c provides a long-term view of blood sugar patterns that may be relevant to heart health, weight, energy, and metabolic wellness.
Insulin
Insulin helps move glucose from the bloodstream into cells.
This test is included because insulin resistance often overlaps with high triglycerides, low HDL, abdominal weight gain, fatty liver, metabolic syndrome, and increased cardiovascular risk. Insulin can provide insight that may not be obvious from glucose or A1c alone.
C-Peptide
C-peptide is released when the body makes insulin.
This test is included because it helps evaluate endogenous insulin production. When reviewed with insulin, glucose, and A1c, C-peptide may provide deeper context for insulin resistance, beta-cell activity, and metabolic heart risk.
Comprehensive Metabolic Panel, CMP
The CMP evaluates glucose, liver function, kidney function, electrolytes, calcium, albumin, total protein, and other metabolic markers.
This test is included because cardiovascular risk review benefits from a broad metabolic and organ-function baseline. CMP results provide context for glucose, kidney function, liver enzymes, electrolytes, calcium, albumin, and protein status.
Uric Acid
Uric acid is a metabolic waste product.
This test is included because uric acid may provide context for metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, high blood pressure, gout risk, kidney stone risk, and cardiometabolic stress.
Kidney, Vascular & Urine Risk Context
Kidney health and vascular health are closely connected. Urine albumin and kidney filtration markers can provide important cardiometabolic and vascular risk context.
Cystatin C with eGFR
Cystatin C with eGFR provides an estimate of kidney filtration.
This test is included because kidney function is an important cardiovascular risk context. Cystatin C may provide additional kidney filtration insight beyond creatinine alone.
Albumin, Random Urine with Creatinine
This urine test evaluates albumin relative to creatinine.
It is included because urine albumin may provide early kidney and vascular stress context, especially in people with diabetes, high blood pressure, insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, or cardiovascular risk.
Urinalysis, UA, Complete
A complete urinalysis evaluates urine markers such as protein, blood, glucose, ketones, specific gravity, pH, and other findings.
This test is included because urinalysis may provide context for kidney health, glucose handling, hydration, protein, blood, ketones, and urine abnormalities that may be relevant to cardiometabolic wellness.
Thyroid Function & Secondary Cholesterol Contributors
Thyroid function can influence cholesterol, triglycerides, metabolism, heart rhythm, energy, weight, and cardiovascular wellness. This group helps identify thyroid-related patterns that may contribute to abnormal cholesterol.
TSH
TSH is a key thyroid screening marker.
This test is included because low thyroid function may contribute to high cholesterol, fatigue, weight changes, cold intolerance, constipation, and low energy. TSH is an important baseline marker when reviewing lipid patterns.
T4, Free
Free T4 measures the available form of thyroxine, a thyroid hormone.
This test is included because Free T4 adds thyroid hormone production context beyond TSH alone. It is useful when cholesterol patterns, fatigue, or metabolic symptoms suggest thyroid involvement.
T3, Free
Free T3 measures the active form of thyroid hormone.
This test is included because T3 is closely tied to metabolism, energy output, and lipid metabolism. It adds deeper thyroid-metabolic context in a Comprehensive heart and cholesterol panel.
Thyroid Peroxidase and Thyroglobulin Antibodies
These antibodies help evaluate autoimmune thyroid patterns.
This test is included because autoimmune thyroid disease may contribute to thyroid dysfunction and secondary cholesterol changes. It adds context when thyroid results, symptoms, or family history suggest autoimmune thyroid involvement.
Liver, Bile Flow, Iron & Metabolic Context
The liver plays a major role in cholesterol production, bile flow, glucose metabolism, triglyceride handling, detoxification, and inflammation. This group provides liver-metabolic and iron-status context.
Gamma Glutamyl Transferase, GGT
GGT is a liver and bile duct enzyme.
This test is included because GGT may provide context for liver stress, bile flow, fatty liver patterns, alcohol exposure, medication use, supplement use, and metabolic liver health. It is especially relevant when triglycerides, insulin resistance, or fatty liver concerns are present.
Bilirubin, Fractionated
Bilirubin, Fractionated measures total, direct, and indirect bilirubin.
This test is included because bilirubin patterns provide liver processing and bile-flow context. It can add useful information beyond standard liver enzymes alone.
Ferritin
Ferritin measures stored iron.
This test is included because ferritin may provide context for iron storage, inflammation, metabolic liver patterns, anemia, and iron overload. Ferritin should be interpreted with iron/TIBC and hs-CRP.
Iron and Total Iron Binding Capacity, TIBC
Iron and TIBC help evaluate circulating iron and iron transport capacity.
This test is included because iron deficiency, iron overload, or abnormal iron availability may provide context for fatigue, metabolic health, inflammation, and liver-related patterns.
Nutrients, Omega Fatty Acids & Methylation Support
Nutrient status can influence inflammation, homocysteine, methylation, omega fatty acid balance, muscle symptoms, and overall cardiovascular wellness.
OMEGACHECK™
OMEGACHECK™ evaluates omega fatty acid status.
This test is included because omega-3 and omega-6 patterns may provide context for cardiovascular wellness, inflammation balance, fish oil use, cell membrane health, and nutrition quality.
Vitamin B12 and Folate Panel, Serum
This panel measures vitamin B12 and folate.
B12 and folate are included because they help interpret homocysteine and support methylation, red blood cell production, nerve function, and vascular wellness.
Vitamin B6, Pyridoxal Phosphate
Vitamin B6 is involved in methylation, neurotransmitter pathways, amino acid metabolism, and homocysteine regulation.
This test is included because B6 helps provide context for homocysteine and cardiovascular methylation patterns.
Methylmalonic Acid
Methylmalonic acid, or MMA, is a functional marker related to vitamin B12 status.
This test is included because MMA may provide deeper B12 interpretation, especially when B12 is borderline or homocysteine is elevated.
Homocysteine
Homocysteine is influenced by vitamin B12, folate, vitamin B6, methylation pathways, kidney function, and vascular health.
This test is included because it provides context for B-vitamin status, methylation, vascular wellness, and cardiovascular risk discussions.
QuestAssureD™ 25-Hydroxyvitamin D, D2, D3, LC/MS/MS
Vitamin D testing measures vitamin D status.
This test is included because vitamin D may provide general cardiometabolic, immune, bone, inflammation, and wellness context.
Magnesium
Magnesium supports blood pressure regulation, glucose metabolism, muscle function, nerve signaling, and heart rhythm.
This test is included because magnesium may provide useful cardiometabolic context, especially when blood pressure, insulin resistance, muscle symptoms, or supplement use are part of the discussion.
Blood Health, Statin Support & Muscle Safety
This group provides general blood health context and markers that may be useful for people taking cholesterol medications or reporting muscle symptoms.
CBC, includes Differential and Platelets
The CBC evaluates red blood cells, white blood cells, hemoglobin, hematocrit, platelets, and white blood cell types.
This test is included because general blood health, anemia patterns, inflammation clues, immune findings, and platelet patterns can add context to cardiovascular wellness.
Creatine Kinase, CK, Total
CK is an enzyme found mainly in muscle tissue.
This test is included because CK may provide context for muscle symptoms, statin use, intense exercise, muscle injury, or muscle breakdown. It can also help clarify whether AST or ALT elevations from the CMP may be muscle-related.
Coenzyme Q10
CoQ10 is involved in mitochondrial energy production and antioxidant support.
This test is included because CoQ10 may provide context for statin use, muscle symptoms, fatigue, mitochondrial energy, and supplement monitoring. It is a premium marker that can support a statin-focused heart health discussion.
Physician-Guided Heart Strain & Cardiac Injury Context
This group includes markers that may provide cardiac strain or injury context. These are not replacements for emergency evaluation and should be interpreted carefully.
proBNP, N-terminal
NT-proBNP/proBNP is a marker that may provide context for heart strain.
This test is included because it may support physician-guided review when symptoms or risk factors raise questions about heart strain or heart failure-related patterns. It should be interpreted with symptoms, kidney function, medications, age, and provider guidance.
Troponin I
Troponin I is a cardiac muscle injury marker.
This test is included as a physician-guided marker that may provide context for cardiac injury patterns. It is not intended as a routine wellness marker or a replacement for urgent medical evaluation. Chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, or symptoms of possible heart attack require immediate medical care.
Related Biomarker Patterns This Panel May Help Identify
This panel may help identify or rule out lab patterns related to:
- High LDL cholesterol
- High triglycerides
- Low HDL cholesterol
- Elevated ApoB particle burden
- Elevated Lipoprotein(a)
- Abnormal lipoprotein particle size or number
- Vascular inflammation
- Oxidized LDL patterns
- Insulin resistance
- Blood sugar imbalance
- Kidney filtration changes
- Urine albumin abnormalities
- Thyroid-related cholesterol patterns
- Liver-metabolic stress
- Homocysteine and methylation patterns
- Omega fatty acid status
- CoQ10 status
- Statin-related muscle enzyme patterns
- Heart strain or cardiac injury markers requiring physician review
Professional Safety and Interpretation Notice
This panel is designed to support heart health, cholesterol, and cardiovascular risk review. It does not diagnose heart attack, heart failure, coronary artery disease, stroke risk, plaque burden, or any cardiovascular condition by itself. Results should be interpreted with a licensed healthcare provider and reviewed with symptoms, age, sex, blood pressure, diabetes status, smoking history, family history, medications, imaging results, and overall health history.
Seek urgent medical care for chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, stroke symptoms, or symptoms of a possible heart attack.
How to Prepare for This Panel
Preparation may vary depending on the specific tests and instructions provided with your order. In general:
- Fasting may be recommended because lipid, glucose, insulin, and C-peptide markers are included.
- Avoid unusually intense exercise before testing if CK or troponin interpretation is important.
- Bring a list of medications and supplements, including statins, blood pressure medications, diabetes medications, aspirin, anticoagulants, fish oil, CoQ10, and thyroid medication.
- Note symptoms such as chest discomfort, shortness of breath, palpitations, leg swelling, muscle aches, fatigue, or exercise intolerance.
- Drink water normally unless instructed otherwise.
- Follow all lab collection instructions provided with your order.
What Happens After You Receive Your Results?
After your results are available, your biomarkers can help organize heart health findings into areas such as cholesterol, lipoprotein particles, inherited risk, vascular inflammation, oxidative LDL stress, blood sugar, insulin resistance, kidney and urine vascular risk, thyroid function, liver-metabolic context, omega fatty acid status, homocysteine, B-vitamin status, CoQ10, statin-related muscle context, and physician-guided cardiac strain or injury markers.
During the physician consultation, you can discuss whether your results suggest the need for follow-up testing, medication review, lifestyle changes, imaging discussions, blood pressure review, statin or lipid-lowering therapy discussion, or additional clinical care.
Additional Panels to Consider
Customers interested in the Heart Health & Cholesterol Comprehensive Lab Panel may also consider:
- Heart Health & Cholesterol Essential Lab Panel
- Heart Health & Cholesterol Advanced Lab Panel
- Weight Loss Resistance & Metabolism Lab Panel
- Prediabetes & Insulin Resistance Lab Panel
- Kidney, Liver & Detox Support Lab Panel
- Thyroid & Metabolism Lab Panel
- Medication Safety Lab Panel
- Medication & Supplement Safety Lab Panel
- Longevity & Healthy Aging Lab Panel
- Inflammation, Autoimmune & Chronic Pain Lab Panel
FAQ: Heart Health & Cholesterol Comprehensive Lab Panel
What is the Heart Health & Cholesterol Comprehensive Lab Panel?
The Heart Health & Cholesterol Comprehensive Lab Panel is a broad blood and urine test panel that evaluates cholesterol, advanced lipoprotein particles, ApoA1, ApoB, Lipoprotein(a), inflammation, oxidative LDL stress, blood sugar, insulin resistance, kidney function, thyroid function, liver-metabolic context, omega fatty acids, CoQ10, homocysteine, B vitamins, and physician-guided cardiac markers.
What blood tests are commonly used to evaluate heart health and cholesterol?
Common heart health and cholesterol tests include a Lipid Panel, ApoB, Lipoprotein(a), hs-CRP, A1c, CMP, kidney markers, thyroid markers, and sometimes advanced lipoprotein particle testing. This Comprehensive panel expands that review with Cardio IQ™ lipoprotein fractionation, Lp-PLA2, MPO, OxLDL, fibrinogen, OMEGACHECK™, CoQ10, proBNP, and Troponin I.
Why is ApoB included?
ApoB helps estimate the number of atherogenic cholesterol-carrying particles. It can provide important context when LDL cholesterol does not fully reflect particle burden.
Why is Lipoprotein(a) included?
Lipoprotein(a), or Lp(a), is largely inherited and may contribute to cardiovascular risk even when standard cholesterol results look acceptable. It is often useful as a baseline inherited risk marker.
Why is Cardio IQ™ Lipoprotein Fractionation included?
Cardio IQ™ Lipoprotein Fractionation provides advanced lipoprotein particle information, including particle size and number. This can help provide deeper insight into cholesterol risk patterns, especially when insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, or family history is present.
Why are hs-CRP, Lp-PLA2, MPO, OxLDL, and fibrinogen included?
These markers provide different views of inflammation, vascular activity, oxidative LDL stress, and coagulation-related context. They are best interpreted with cholesterol markers, blood pressure, diabetes status, family history, and clinician guidance.
Why are A1c, insulin, and C-peptide included?
Blood sugar and insulin resistance are major cardiometabolic risk factors. A1c, insulin, and C-peptide help evaluate glucose trends, insulin resistance, and insulin production.
Why are thyroid markers included in a cholesterol panel?
Thyroid function can affect cholesterol, triglycerides, energy, weight, and metabolism. TSH, Free T4, Free T3, and thyroid antibodies help evaluate thyroid-related contributors to cholesterol patterns.
Why are kidney markers included?
Kidney function and urine albumin patterns can provide cardiovascular and vascular risk context, especially in people with diabetes, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, or insulin resistance.
Why are CoQ10 and CK included?
CK may provide muscle enzyme context for people using statins or experiencing muscle symptoms. CoQ10 may provide mitochondrial energy and statin-support context.
Are troponin and proBNP screening tests?
Troponin I and proBNP are physician-guided markers. Troponin is commonly used when cardiac injury is suspected, while proBNP may provide heart strain context. These tests are not substitutes for urgent evaluation if symptoms are present.
Can this panel diagnose heart disease?
No. This panel does not diagnose heart disease, heart attack, heart failure, plaque, or stroke risk by itself. It helps evaluate biomarkers that may support a provider-guided cardiovascular risk discussion.
Should I choose Essential, Advanced, or Comprehensive?
Choose Essential for a focused cholesterol and cardiometabolic baseline, Advanced for deeper insulin, kidney, thyroid, nutrient, and ApoB/Lp(a) review, and Comprehensive for the broadest advanced cardiovascular biomarker review.
Important Note
This panel is designed to help evaluate selected biomarkers related to heart health, cholesterol, advanced lipoprotein risk, inflammation, oxidative LDL stress, blood sugar, insulin resistance, kidney function, thyroid function, liver health, omega fatty acids, CoQ10, methylation, statin-related muscle context, and physician-guided cardiac markers. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease by itself. Results should be reviewed with a licensed healthcare provider.