Lipid Screening
HDL, LDL, total cholesterol, and triglycerides for cardiovascular awareness.
Add to your order
No referral needed
Added to your order
Click the button to view your cart
Results within 1–3 working days after your blood draw (estimate)
Included Markers
4 markersA lipid panel measuring HDL, LDL, Total Cholesterol, and Triglycerides. These markers together provide insight into your cholesterol balance and its possible relationship to cardiovascular health.
Why this test?
Cholesterol and triglyceride levels in the blood can be influenced by diet, physical activity, genetics, and other factors. Measuring them can help you understand your current lipid balance and give you a value to discuss with your healthcare provider if you wish.
Who is this test for?
This test may be relevant for adults who want insight into their cholesterol levels, for example as part of general health awareness, or for those whose healthcare provider has suggested checking lipid values.
What is tested?
- HDL Cholesterol (mmol/l): often called "good" cholesterol; may play a protective role in cardiovascular health.
- LDL Cholesterol (mmol/l): often called "bad" cholesterol; elevated levels may be associated with increased cardiovascular risk.
- Total Cholesterol (mmol/l): the sum of all cholesterol types in the blood.
- Triglycerides (mmol/l): a type of fat in the blood; levels can be influenced by diet, alcohol, and metabolic factors.
What can this test tell you?
The results may show whether your cholesterol and triglyceride levels fall within expected ranges. The balance between HDL and LDL, along with triglyceride levels, can offer context about your lipid health. These values can be influenced by lifestyle choices such as diet and physical activity.
How is the sample collected?
A blood sample is drawn at a certified sample point (afnamepunt). There are over 750 locations across the Netherlands. After placing your order, you can select a location and time that suits you.
When is this test useful?
This test may be useful when you want a clear picture of your cholesterol and triglyceride levels, whether out of personal curiosity or at the suggestion of your healthcare provider.
What do the results mean?
Results are presented with reference ranges. Cholesterol values should be considered together rather than individually, and factors such as family history, age, and lifestyle play a role in their interpretation. A healthcare provider can help you understand the results in the context of your overall health.
Preparation
Fasting for 8 to 12 hours before the blood draw is required for reliable triglyceride and LDL results. Water is fine to drink during the fasting period.
What happens after the results?
Your results are available in your personal dashboard. If you have questions or if any values fall outside the reference range, discussing the results with your healthcare provider is recommended.
Frequently Asked Questions
From order to report in 4 steps
No waiting, no referral. Just order and go.
Choose your check-up
Browse our health panels and choose the check-up that fits you. Compare markers, or build a custom test.
Receive your lab referral
On the same business day you'll receive an email from ZorgDomein with a barcode. Orders outside business hours are processed the next business day.
Get tested at a lab near you
Show the barcode on your phone and bring a valid ID. Done in under 15 minutes.
Receive your report from the doctor
A BIG-registered physician reviews your results and writes a personal report. On your dashboard within a few business days.
Choose your check-up
Browse our health panels and choose the check-up that fits you. Compare markers, or build a custom test.
Receive your lab referral
On the same business day you'll receive an email from ZorgDomein with a barcode. Orders outside business hours are processed the next business day.
Get tested at a lab near you
Show the barcode on your phone and bring a valid ID. Done in under 15 minutes.
Receive your report from the doctor
A BIG-registered physician reviews your results and writes a personal report. On your dashboard within a few business days.
Always a location near you
With more than 700+ certified phlebotomy points across the Netherlands.
What We Test
This health panel includes 4 biomarkers to give you a clear picture of your health.
Triglycerides are the most common type of fat in the body, used for energy storage. Elevated levels may be associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, especially when combined with other lipid abnormalities.
Learn moreLDL cholesterol is the amount of cholesterol carried inside LDL particles, the particles that can build up in the artery wall. That is where its nickname comes from: the bad cholesterol. Two things rarely appear on a report. First, in a routine lipid panel LDL is usually not measured but calculated from your total cholesterol, your HDL and your triglycerides. Second, the 3.0 mmol/l upper limit is a population reference interval, not a target. What counts as a good LDL for you is decided by your overall cardiovascular risk, not by the line printed on the page.
Learn moreTotal cholesterol measures the combined amount of HDL, LDL, and VLDL cholesterol in your blood. It provides an overview of your lipid status but should be interpreted alongside individual components for a complete cardiovascular risk picture.
Learn moreHDL cholesterol is the amount of cholesterol carried inside the HDL particles in your blood. Those particles pick cholesterol up from your tissues and from the artery wall and take it back to the liver. That transport is what earned HDL the nickname good cholesterol. The nickname is misleading. HDL is above all a mirror of your metabolism: the value drops with excess weight, insulin resistance, smoking and inactivity, and it is those factors that carry the risk. Drugs that raise HDL substantially do not reduce the number of cardiovascular events. And more is not always better: at very high values, mortality in large population studies turns back upwards. So never read your HDL on its own. It only takes on meaning alongside your triglycerides, your LDL and your overall risk profile.
Learn moreTriglycerides
CardiovascularTriglycerides are the most common type of fat in the body, used for energy storage. Elevated levels may be associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, especially when combined with other lipid abnormalities.
Elevated triglycerides may contribute to atherosclerosis and are a component of metabolic syndrome. They are often elevated alongside insulin resistance. Consult your healthcare provider.
LDL Cholesterol
CardiovascularLDL cholesterol is the amount of cholesterol carried inside LDL particles, the particles that can build up in the artery wall. That is where its nickname comes from: the bad cholesterol. Two things rarely appear on a report. First, in a routine lipid panel LDL is usually not measured but calculated from your total cholesterol, your HDL and your triglycerides. Second, the 3.0 mmol/l upper limit is a population reference interval, not a target. What counts as a good LDL for you is decided by your overall cardiovascular risk, not by the line printed on the page.
Of all the values in a lipid panel, LDL has the strongest causal link with atherosclerosis. Every LDL particle carries one apolipoprotein B, enters the artery wall and can lodge there. The more of those particles pass through over decades, the more plaque builds up. That is why lowering a raised LDL is the best-evidenced way to reduce the risk of a heart attack and a stroke. The most important sentence on this page, however, is not about high or low but about for whom. The 3.0 mmol/l upper limit on your report is a reference interval: it describes what is common in the population. It is not a goal. Guidelines tie the goal to your risk. <table><thead><tr><th>Situation</th><th>Guideline LDL goal</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Established cardiovascular disease, up to age 70 (Dutch CVRM guideline)</td><td>below 1.8 mmol/l</td></tr><tr><td>High or very high risk, or diabetes or chronic kidney disease, up to age 70 (CVRM)</td><td>below 2.6 mmol/l</td></tr><tr><td>Very high risk (ESC/EAS 2019)</td><td>below 1.4 mmol/l</td></tr><tr><td>High risk (ESC/EAS 2019)</td><td>below 1.8 mmol/l</td></tr><tr><td>Moderate risk (ESC/EAS 2019)</td><td>below 2.6 mmol/l</td></tr><tr><td>Low risk (ESC/EAS 2019)</td><td>below 3.0 mmol/l</td></tr></tbody></table> The consequence is sharp. An LDL of 2.8 mmol/l sits neatly inside the reference interval on the printout, while that same 2.8 is clearly too high for someone who has had a heart attack. Conversely, an LDL of 3.2 in a thirty-year-old with no other risk factors leads to a very different conversation than in a sixty-year-old who smokes, has diabetes and has high blood pressure. Your risk category, built from age, blood pressure, smoking, diabetes, kidney function, family history and existing cardiovascular disease, is what decides what your number means. Above seventy, LDL lowering is not routinely started in people without cardiovascular disease. A second situation deserves attention. A strongly raised LDL in someone who takes no lipid-lowering medication, particularly alongside early cardiovascular disease in close relatives, is a reason for a doctor to look into whether familial hypercholesterolaemia may be present. That inherited condition affects roughly 1 in 250 to 300 people and remains under-diagnosed in the Netherlands. A blood value does not make that diagnosis and cannot make it: the conversation belongs with your doctor, who also looks at your family and your history. The sensible reading rule, then, is that a single LDL number without a risk profile says little. Place the result alongside your HDL, your triglycerides, your non-HDL cholesterol and your blood pressure, and assess it together with a doctor.
Total Cholesterol
CardiovascularTotal cholesterol measures the combined amount of HDL, LDL, and VLDL cholesterol in your blood. It provides an overview of your lipid status but should be interpreted alongside individual components for a complete cardiovascular risk picture.
Total cholesterol is a basic screening marker for cardiovascular risk. However, the breakdown into HDL, LDL, and triglycerides provides more actionable information. Consult your healthcare provider for interpretation.
HDL Cholesterol
CardiovascularHDL cholesterol is the amount of cholesterol carried inside the HDL particles in your blood. Those particles pick cholesterol up from your tissues and from the artery wall and take it back to the liver. That transport is what earned HDL the nickname good cholesterol. The nickname is misleading. HDL is above all a mirror of your metabolism: the value drops with excess weight, insulin resistance, smoking and inactivity, and it is those factors that carry the risk. Drugs that raise HDL substantially do not reduce the number of cardiovascular events. And more is not always better: at very high values, mortality in large population studies turns back upwards. So never read your HDL on its own. It only takes on meaning alongside your triglycerides, your LDL and your overall risk profile.
Almost every page about HDL says the same thing: HDL is the good cholesterol, and the higher the better. Both halves of that sentence are wrong, which is exactly why this is the most important section on this page. <strong>Higher is not always better.</strong> The relationship between HDL and all-cause mortality is not a straight line but a U. In two large Danish population studies, together more than 116,000 men and women, the lowest mortality sat at an HDL of roughly 1.9 mmol/l in men and roughly 2.4 mmol/l in women. Above that, the curve turns: men with an HDL of 3.0 mmol/l or more had roughly twice the mortality, women from 3.5 mmol/l upwards around one and a half times. An extremely high HDL is therefore not a certificate of health, and it deserves a conversation with your doctor rather than congratulations. <strong>HDL is a gauge, not a dial.</strong> If a high HDL protects, then raising HDL ought to help. That has been tried extensively and it did not work. Drugs that inhibit the CETP transfer protein raised HDL by tens of percent and did not reduce heart attacks; the first in that class actually caused more deaths. Niacin raised HDL, but added no benefit on top of a statin and did add side effects. Genetic research points the same way: people who naturally carry a variant that raises HDL do not have a lower risk of myocardial infarction because of it, while that does hold for LDL-lowering variants. What does that mean? That a low HDL is not a cause, but a signal. HDL is low because something else is going on: visceral fat, insulin resistance, smoking, too little movement, or high triglycerides. Those are the factors that carry the risk. Fixating on the HDL number means treating the thermometer instead of the fever. <strong>So what do you do with it.</strong> Use HDL as context for the rest of your panel. A low HDL alongside high triglycerides and a raised fasting glucose together sketch a metabolic pattern that genuinely does carry risk. A low HDL also raises the cholesterol/HDL ratio, which is used in Dutch risk tables. But the values that predict risk most sharply are LDL, non-HDL cholesterol and ApoB, the number of risk-carrying particles. Your HDL says nothing about those. And finally: there is no target value for HDL. Your doctor does not set an HDL goal the way they set one for LDL, because no treatment has been shown to lower your risk by raising HDL.
Related biomarkers
Biomarkers often explored alongside this test for a fuller picture.
ApoA1 (Apolipoprotein A1)
ApoA1 measures HDL's protective function, which becomes increasingly important for cardiovascular health as you age. Regular monitoring supports heart disease prevention.
ApoB (Apolipoprotein B)
ApoB measures the atherogenic particles that accumulate over a lifetime. Monitoring is essential for managing cardiovascular risk and supporting heart health in later years.
CK-MB
CK-MB helps detect heart muscle issues that may become more relevant with age. Monitoring supports proactive cardiac health management in later years.
Cholesterol/HDL Ratio
The cholesterol/HDL ratio is your total cholesterol divided by your HDL. Cardiovascular risk tends to rise with age, and a lower ratio points to a more favourable profile. Learn what your value can mean.
LDL/HDL Ratio
The LDL/HDL ratio is your LDL cholesterol divided by your HDL. A lower ratio is more favourable and becomes more relevant as cardiovascular risk rises with age. Learn what your value can mean.
Lipoprotein(a)
Lp(a) stands for lipoprotein(a): an LDL-like particle with an extra protein attached to it. Its level is more than 90 percent written into your genes and barely changes across your life. For anyone already taking a cholesterol-lowering drug, that comes as a surprise. A statin lowers your LDL powerfully, but leaves Lp(a) untouched and in fact lifts it slightly. So your medicine does not cover this number. That is no reason for alarm, but it is a reason for a conversation. A raised result does not automatically mean another pill; it means a sharper look at what you can still steer at your age: your blood pressure, your ApoB and your blood sugar.
Related Health Panels
Discover more panels for a comprehensive health picture.
Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR)
Insulin resistance becomes more relevant with age. Track it with fasting glucose, insulin and your HOMA-IR score.
5–7 working days
Diabetes Panel
Fasting glucose and HbA1c for blood sugar insight.
2–4 working days
PSA Test
Total PSA measurement to support prostate health awareness.
2–4 working days
This test not quite right?
Build your own blood test from 196+ individual biomarkers — choose exactly what you need.
Have a question?
Our team is happy to help. Ask your question and we'll respond as soon as possible.