Understanding your labs
LDL 200: What It Means and How to Improve It
If your LDL came back at 200, you're probably wondering how serious it is — and what you can realistically do about it.
Your LDL level
Very High
This level warrants a conversation with your doctor about next steps.
How LDL Levels Are Categorized
| LDL (mg/dL) | Category |
|---|---|
| Under 100 | Optimal |
| 100–129 | Near optimal |
| 130–159 | Borderline high |
| 160–189 | High |
| 190+ | Very high |
Your value (200) is highlighted above.
How Much Can It Improve — and How Fast?
Most meaningful changes to LDL happen over a 6–12 week window — which is why tracking your habits consistently matters more than any single day.
What Actually Moves LDL
Not everything has equal impact. Here are the habits with the strongest evidence for improving LDL:
Increase soluble fiber (oats, beans, vegetables)
Can reduce LDL by 5–10 points
Replace saturated fat with unsaturated fat
One of the strongest dietary levers
Regular aerobic exercise (30 min most days)
Modest LDL reduction, stronger HDL benefit
Lose 5–10% of body weight if overweight
Can reduce LDL by 10–20 points
Reduce processed and packaged foods
Eliminates hidden saturated and trans fats
The Part Nobody Talks About
Most people don't fail because they don't know what to do. They fail because they can't tell if anything is working.
You won't see LDL change day to day — so without a way to track consistency, it's easy to lose momentum before your next lab test.
That's the gap LipidLog was built to fill.
Track Your Progress Between Lab Tests
LipidLog helps you log the habits that affect your labs, see your cholesterol score, and stay consistent between now and your next test.
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