Family history can feel like a verdict. It isn’t. But it does mean the standard prevention
playbook probably needs to be adjusted for you.
What You’re Actually Inheriting
Genetic cardiovascular risk can mean higher baseline levels of certain cholesterol particles,
a greater tendency toward plaque formation, elevated inflammation in vessel walls, or
increased clotting risk. Sometimes all of the above.
One marker worth knowing about: Lp(a), or lipoprotein(a). It’s genetically determined,
largely unaffected by diet or statins, and it directly promotes plaque buildup and clotting.
It’s also not included on a standard lipid panel. Most people with significant family history
have never had it checked.
Three Tests That Actually Clarify Your Risk
Lp(a): Check it at least once. It doesn’t change much over your lifetime, but knowing the
number changes how you and your doctor should be thinking about your risk.
ApoB: A more precise measure of plaque-forming particle count than standard LDL alone.
Coronary Artery Calcium (CAC) scan: Low-radiation imaging that shows whether plaque
is already present, before any symptoms appear.
None of these are exotic. They’re just underused.
Why Your Targets May Look Different
With genetic risk, clinicians often aim for lower LDL and ApoB thresholds and recommend
earlier, more proactive intervention. That’s not overreaction. The margin for error is
genuinely smaller, and the evidence for acting early is strong.
The short version: Family history is an advantage if you use it correctly. Get the right tests,
understand your actual numbers, and build a prevention plan that’s calibrated to your
biology, not population averages.