Triglycerides are the fat your body actually uses for energy. After a meal, dietary fat and excess carbohydrates are packaged as triglycerides and shipped through your bloodstream to muscle and fat tissue. Most of the time the system runs cleanly. When it does not, triglycerides accumulate — and the consequences range from cosmetic (a "milky" plasma sample) to dangerous (acute pancreatitis at very high levels).
The triglyceride number is also a side door into a more important question: do you have insulin resistance? Of all the values on a standard lipid panel, triglycerides are the most sensitive to refined carbohydrates, alcohol, and the metabolic syndrome cluster.
What triglycerides measure
Triglycerides are three fatty acids attached to a glycerol backbone — the basic storage form of fat. The number on your lipid panel is the concentration of triglycerides circulating in plasma, mostly inside very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) particles.
Two characteristics make this test different from LDL or HDL:
- It is highly meal-sensitive. Triglycerides can be 50% higher 4 hours after a meal than after a 12-hour fast. This is why fasting is required for an accurate value.
- It moves fast. Diet changes show up in triglycerides within days. Cutting alcohol and refined carbohydrates can drop a 350 reading to 180 in a couple of weeks.
Non-fasting triglycerides are now considered acceptable for routine screening (European guidelines accept anything below 175 mg/dL non-fasting), but for diagnostic decisions and follow-up, a fasting sample is still standard.
Triglycerides chart
| Grupo demográfico | Bajo | Alto | Unidad |
|---|---|---|---|
| Optimal | 0 | 99 | mg/dL |
| Normal | 100 | 149 | mg/dL |
| Borderline high | 150 | 199 | mg/dL |
| High | 200 | 499 | mg/dL |
| Very high (pancreatitis risk) | 500 | 5000 | mg/dL |
Standard cutoffs from the AHA, NCEP, and ESC. These apply to fasting samples in adults.
- Normal: below 150 mg/dL (1.7 mmol/L)
- Borderline high: 150–199 mg/dL
- High: 200–499 mg/dL
- Very high: 500 mg/dL or above — pancreatitis risk
The 2026 guidelines moved away from a single "normal" line toward a more nuanced view: optimal is below 100. Between 100 and 150 is acceptable but suggests insulin-resistance physiology if it persists.
What high triglycerides mean
Mildly elevated triglycerides (150–500 mg/dL) almost always reflect lifestyle and metabolic factors, not a primary lipid disorder:
- Refined carbohydrates and added sugar. The biggest dietary lever, larger than dietary fat. Sweetened drinks, fruit juice, white bread, and pastries reliably raise triglycerides.
- Alcohol. Direct, dose-dependent effect. Heavy drinkers commonly run triglycerides above 300.
- Excess weight, especially central obesity.
- Type 2 diabetes or insulin resistance. High triglycerides + low HDL is the classic insulin-resistant lipid pattern.
- Hypothyroidism, kidney disease, liver disease.
- Pregnancy. Triglycerides physiologically rise and can triple by the third trimester.
- Medications. Estrogens, tamoxifen, retinoids (isotretinoin can raise triglycerides dramatically), some antiretrovirals, beta-blockers, thiazide diuretics, atypical antipsychotics.
Triglycerides above 500 enter different territory — they create risk of acute pancreatitis, a medical emergency. Above 1000, pancreatitis risk is substantial. People with familial hypertriglyceridemia or familial chylomicronemia syndrome can run levels in the thousands and need specialist management.
Triglycerides also distort the calculated LDL. The Friedewald equation (LDL = Total − HDL − Trig/5) is unreliable above 400. If your triglycerides are high, ask whether your LDL was directly measured or use the Martin–Hopkins equation.
Can triglycerides be too low?
Genuinely low triglycerides (below 50 mg/dL) are uncommon and usually benign. Causes worth knowing:
- Hyperthyroidism
- Malabsorption — celiac, advanced inflammatory bowel disease
- Severe malnutrition or eating disorders
- Some genetic conditions (hypobetalipoproteinemia)
Low triglycerides on their own rarely change clinical decisions, but unexplained low triglycerides plus low LDL plus low total cholesterol is a pattern that warrants a workup — especially if you have not been actively trying to lower these numbers.
The trig/HDL ratio nobody talks about
The triglyceride-to-HDL ratio is one of the most informative numbers you can pull off a standard lipid panel — and it is rarely on a lab printout.
- Triglycerides ÷ HDL below 2: healthy lipid metabolism, low likelihood of insulin resistance.
- Around 3: borderline.
- Above 4: strongly suggests insulin resistance and a predominance of small-dense LDL particles, which are more atherogenic per unit of LDL cholesterol.
The ratio outperforms either number alone in predicting cardiovascular events in several large cohort studies. The fix is the same as the fix for high triglycerides — fewer refined carbohydrates, less alcohol, more aerobic activity, more visceral fat lost.
Triglycerides also respond fast to action. Most patients see a 20–30% drop within 4–6 weeks of removing sweetened drinks and reducing alcohol. That feedback loop makes them one of the more rewarding numbers to track if you are working on metabolic health.
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When to act on triglycerides
- Triglycerides ≥ 500 mg/dL — call your doctor within days. Above 1000, urgent care is reasonable.
- Severe abdominal pain with high triglycerides — go to the emergency department. Hypertriglyceridemia is the third leading cause of acute pancreatitis.
- Triglycerides 200–499 with low HDL — the metabolic syndrome pattern; address visceral fat, refined carbohydrates, and alcohol.
- A jump of more than 100 mg/dL between consecutive panels with no change in habits — review medications (especially estrogens, retinoids, atypical antipsychotics), check thyroid, and rule out new diabetes.
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Tests that complete the picture
- HDL Cholesterol — the trig/HDL ratio is one of the cleanest insulin-resistance markers on a standard panel.
- LDL Cholesterol — high triglycerides distort the standard calculated LDL.
- HbA1c and fasting glucose — high triglycerides almost always travel with developing or established insulin resistance.
- Apolipoprotein B — a better atherogenic-particle count than LDL when triglycerides are high.
- Liver enzymes (ALT, AST) — fatty liver is a common companion to high triglycerides.