Vibimine
Heart HealthMetabolicLongevity

Triglycerides

Also known as: TG, trigs, serum triglycerides

The most common type of fat in your blood elevated levels signal metabolic and cardiovascular risk.

What is Triglycerides?

Triglycerides are the main form of fat stored and transported in the body, coming from food and produced by the liver. Measured as part of a lipid panel (fasting for best accuracy), elevated triglycerides are closely tied to insulin resistance, excess sugar and alcohol intake, and increased cardiovascular risk.

Why it matters

High triglycerides are a marker of poor metabolic health and, when very high, can cause pancreatitis. The triglyceride-to-HDL ratio is a useful clue to insulin resistance.

What it measures

The concentration of triglycerides in serum, ideally after a 9–12 hour fast.

Reference & optimal ranges

Reference ranges vary by lab, assay, age, and sex. The ranges below reflect commonly published adult intervals and are for education only always interpret results with the range printed on your own lab report and a clinician.

Normalmg/dL
Standard range Optimal
Borderline highmg/dL
Standard range
Highmg/dL
Standard range
Very highmg/dL
Standard range
High Triglycerides

High triglycerides reflect metabolic dysfunction and raise cardiovascular risk; very high levels risk pancreatitis.

Common symptoms

  • None usually
  • Very high levels: abdominal pain (pancreatitis)

Potential causes

  • Excess sugar, refined carbs, and alcohol
  • Insulin resistance / type 2 diabetes
  • Obesity
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Genetics
Low Triglycerides

Low triglycerides are generally not a concern and often reflect a low-carbohydrate diet or good metabolic health.

Common symptoms

  • None

Potential causes

  • Low-carbohydrate diet
  • Good metabolic health
  • Rare genetic conditions or malnutrition

How to improve your Triglycerides

Lifestyle

  • Limit alcohol

    Alcohol strongly raises triglycerides in susceptible people.

Nutrition

  • Cut added sugar and refined carbs

    These are the biggest dietary driver of high triglycerides; omega-3 fats help lower them.

Exercise

  • Regular aerobic exercise

    Effectively lowers triglycerides and improves insulin sensitivity.

Sleep

  • Prioritize sleep

    Poor sleep worsens the insulin resistance that raises triglycerides.

Frequently asked questions

Scientific references

Pending clinician reviewPublished Jul 2, 2026 · Updated Jul 2, 2026

Educational information, not medical advice. This page is for general education and does not replace diagnosis or treatment by a licensed clinician. Do not start, stop, or change any medication, supplement, or treatment based on this content. Reference and optimal ranges vary between laboratories interpret your results with the range on your own report and a qualified professional.