Cholesterol is essential for building cells and producing vitamins and hormones. However, elevated cholesterol levels can cause plaque buildup in blood vessels, increasing the risk of heart attacks and strokes. Cholesterol travels through the bloodstream via lipoproteins, categorized into four main classes. Three of these classes contain apolipoprotein B (apoB) and are associated with “bad cholesterol,” while the fourth class helps remove excess cholesterol, earning it the label “good cholesterol”.
Currently, heart disease risk assessment primarily relies on measuring cholesterol levels. However, researchers are increasingly turning to the carriers of “bad cholesterol” — the lipoproteins — as potentially more reliable indicators of cardiovascular risk.
Jakub Morze, lead author and postdoctoral fellow at Chalmers, explains: “It was previously unclear if two patients with the same total level of “bad cholesterol”, but that differ in their carrier characteristics (lipoprotein type, size, lipid content), have the same risk of heart disease. So, the aim of this study was to determine the importance of these different parameters.”