Turn lipid numbers into an easy score. Compare LDL, HDL, and triglycerides. Understand blood pressure and lifestyle effects. Use results to plan next healthy steps.
| Profile | Age | Sex | TC | LDL | HDL | TG | SBP | BP Meds | Smoker | Diabetes | Family | BMI | Score | Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Profile A | 34 | Female | 185 | 95 | 62 | 110 | 112 | No | No | No | No | 22.8 | -1 | Low |
| Profile B | 52 | Male | 228 | 148 | 45 | 210 | 138 | No | Yes | No | Yes | 29.4 | 15 | Very High |
| Profile C | 67 | Male | 262 | 176 | 38 | 320 | 162 | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 33.2 | 23 | Very High |
These examples illustrate scoring behavior across typical lipid and blood pressure patterns.
The calculator converts each input into points using threshold bands, then sums all points:
Total Score = AgePoints(age, sex) + TotalCholPoints(total_cholesterol) + LDLPoints(ldl) + HDLPoints(hdl) // can be negative when HDL is high + TriglyceridePoints(tg) + SBPPoints(systolic_bp, on_bp_meds) + SmokerPoints(smoker) + DiabetesPoints(diabetes) + FamilyHistoryPoints(family_history) + BMIPoints(bmi_optional)
LDL carries the heaviest weighting because the bands step from <100 to ≥190 mg/dL. Each step adds points, helping you see how far your value is from the next threshold. HDL can subtract one point at ≥60 mg/dL, acting as a modest buffer. If HDL is <40 mg/dL, points rise because protective capacity is lower. Aim for repeat testing under similar conditions, because illness, fasting status, and recent exercise can shift numbers temporarily meaningfully.
Total cholesterol uses four bands: <200, 200–239, 240–279, and ≥280 mg/dL. Triglycerides add points at 150, 200, and 500 mg/dL, which often signals diet or insulin-resistance effects. When total cholesterol and triglycerides both score high, consider reviewing non‑HDL cholesterol (TC minus HDL) with your clinician for a fuller atherogenic picture.
Systolic blood pressure is grouped into five ranges: <120, 120–129, 130–139, 140–159, and ≥160 mmHg. Higher ranges add more points because long-term pressure exposure damages vessels. Checking “on BP medication” adds a small point to represent treated hypertension history. For best accuracy, use an average of several home readings taken on different days.
Smoking and diabetes each add two points because they magnify risk beyond cholesterol alone. Family history adds one point to reflect inherited susceptibility. BMI is optional and adds up to three points: 25–29.9 adds one, 30–34.9 adds two, and ≥35 adds three. If BMI is misleading for muscular builds, leave it blank and focus on lipids and BP.
The category is a simple interpretation layer: Low (≤2), Moderate (3–6), High (7–11), and Very High (≥12). Use the breakdown table and the bar chart to find the largest drivers. A one-step improvement in LDL or systolic BP can move you down a band, so target changes that cross a threshold rather than tiny fluctuations.
Recheck fasting lipids after 6–12 weeks of a new plan or medication change. Track blood pressure at home, then bring the average to your appointment. Discuss LDL targets, statin eligibility, and secondary causes like thyroid issues or certain drugs. Export your results to CSV or PDF to support shared decisions and to document progress over time.
No. It is an educational score based on threshold points. Use it to organize discussions, not to diagnose disease or decide medication without clinical guidance.
This version expects mg/dL for cholesterol and triglycerides, and mmHg for systolic blood pressure. If your report uses mmol/L, convert before entering values.
Higher HDL is often associated with lower observed risk, so ≥60 mg/dL subtracts one point. HDL is only one factor; LDL, BP, and diabetes can still dominate overall risk.
That pattern usually means a data-entry error or unit mismatch. Recheck the lab report and ensure each value is copied correctly before trusting the score or exporting results.
BMI can overestimate risk in very muscular people. If BMI feels misleading, leave it blank. The lipid and blood pressure inputs still provide a useful scoring structure.
Address the largest point contributors first: smoking cessation, systolic BP control, and LDL reduction. Pair lifestyle changes with clinician-guided therapy when indicated, then recheck labs to confirm improvement.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.