Triglycerides are a type of lipid (fat). Your body gets triglycerides from fats in the food you eat and it can also make triglycerides in the liver. When your body digests food, fats in the food change to triglycerides. Your body can also make more triglycerides in the liver from fat, carbohydrates, and protein. Triglycerides are carried by the blood to all parts of your body to be used as energy or stored as fat.
A blood test can measure the level of triglycerides in your blood. The levels vary with age. They also depend on when you last ate before the test. The measurement is most accurate if you have not eaten in the last 12 hours or so. Generally, you want your triglyceride level to be 150 mg/dL or less. A level between 150 and 199 mg/dL is borderline high. A level of 200 mg/dL is high. Triglycerides rarely reach extremely high levels unless you have an inherited tendency for high levels.
Triglycerides combine with a protein in your blood to form chemicals called high-density and low-density lipoproteins. The lipoproteins contain cholesterol, which is one of the fats in blood that is related to heart disease.
High triglyceride levels may have several causes:
A high triglyceride level is one of the components of metabolic syndrome. Metabolic syndrome increases your risk for heart disease. A level above normal may also be a risk factor for diabetes. Very high triglycerides may increase the risk for inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis).
Your healthcare provider can measure your triglyceride level with a simple blood test. You should not eat for 12 to 14 hours before the test. Your provider wants to know only the amount of triglycerides being made by your liver, not what is produced by digestion.
Here are things you can do to lower or prevent a high triglyceride level.
If these lifestyle changes do not lower your triglyceride levels, your healthcare provider may prescribe a medicine to decrease the liver's production of triglycerides and to clear triglycerides from your blood. The medicine will also help reduce cholesterol and your risk for heart disease.