Small Dense LDL

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Small Dense LDL
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Small Dense LDL, in Visit Clinic

Measures small, dense LDL cholesterol particles that increase risk of artery plaque and heart disease in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Blood
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Small Dense LDL Test in Visit Clinic?

This test measures the amount or proportion of small, dense LDL particles in your blood. These are a type of "bad" cholesterol particle that is smaller and denser than typical LDL. Small, dense LDL is more likely to slip into artery walls and become oxidized. That makes it more likely to form plaque and raise heart disease risk. Doctors use this test to refine cardiovascular risk assessment. It helps when standard cholesterol numbers do not explain risk. It is useful for people with high triglycerides, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, or a family history of early heart disease. Results can guide lifestyle changes and treatment choices.

Small Dense LDL Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

Do not eat or drink anything except water for 8-12 hours before the test

Small Dense LDL Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Small Dense LDL test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Small Dense LDL Test in Visit Clinic?

Small Dense LDL is often part of an advanced lipid panel or LDL subfraction test used to refine heart risk assessment. Doctors may order it when routine cholesterol or triglyceride results are unclear, or when a person has diabetes, metabolic syndrome, or a family history of early heart disease. Abnormal results can come from genetics, obesity, high carbohydrate diets, insulin resistance, smoking, or certain medications. Results help guide lifestyle changes and treatment.

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Frequently asked questions

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What causes small, dense LDL in Visit Clinic?plus

Small, dense LDL particles arise from genetic factors and metabolic conditions that raise triglyceride levels and alter lipid metabolism. Common causes include insulin resistance, obesity, metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, high intake of refined carbohydrates and added sugars, smoking, physical inactivity, and certain medications or hormonal disorders. These factors promote triglyceride-rich lipoproteins that modify LDL into smaller, denser, more atherogenic particles.

What is a small LDL test in Visit Clinic?plus

A small LDL test measures the size and amount of low‑density lipoprotein particles, identifying smaller, denser LDL that are more likely to penetrate artery walls and promote atherosclerosis. It's used when cardiovascular risk needs finer assessment beyond a standard cholesterol panel. Detecting predominance of small, dense LDL can influence treatment choices and lifestyle recommendations to reduce heart disease risk.

What is the difference between large LDL and small LDL in Visit Clinic?plus

Large LDL particles are bigger, more buoyant, and less likely to penetrate artery walls or become oxidized, so they’re generally less atherogenic. Small, dense LDL particles are smaller, denser, penetrate the endothelium more easily, resist receptor clearance, and oxidize more readily—traits that raise their atherosclerotic and cardiovascular risk; they often occur with high triglycerides and insulin resistance.

What is the reference range for small dense LDL in Visit Clinic?plus

Reference ranges for small dense LDL (sdLDL) vary by laboratory and assay. Commonly used cutoffs are: <20 mg/dL — low/optimal; 20–40 mg/dL — borderline/elevated; >40 mg/dL — high risk. Some labs report percent of total LDL or use different units; always interpret sdLDL with the full lipid profile and clinical context. Discuss results with your clinician.

How to decrease small, dense LDL in Visit Clinic?plus

To lower small, dense LDL: lose excess weight, exercise regularly, quit smoking and limit alcohol; cut refined carbs and added sugars, increase soluble fiber (oats, legumes), and replace saturated/trans fats with monounsaturated fats and omega‑3s (fatty fish, nuts). Control diabetes and triglycerides. When needed, a clinician may prescribe statins, fibrates or prescription omega‑3s—discuss personalized treatment with your doctor.

What foods increase small, dense LDL in Visit Clinic?plus

Foods high in refined carbohydrates and added sugars—white bread, pastries, sweets, sugary drinks, refined cereals and crackers—and foods high in trans fats—fried fast food, commercial baked goods, some margarines and packaged snacks—tend to increase small, dense LDL. Very high fructose intake (sweetened beverages) and calorie‑dense processed foods that promote weight gain also raise sdLDL.