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Heart & Vascular Health

Apolipoprotein B (ApoB) Biomarker Test

Measure your ApoB levels to understand the number of plaque-forming particles circulating in your blood.

ApoB provides a direct count of atherogenic particles, offering sharper insight than LDL cholesterol alone.

It clarifies hidden risk, strengthens treatment decisions, and delivers reliable, event-level prediction for heart protection.

With Superpower, you have access to a comprehensive range of biomarker tests.

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Sample type:
Blood
HSA/FSA:
Accepted
Collection method:
In-person at the lab, or at-home

Key Benefits

  • Pinpoint your burden of artery-clogging particles, beyond standard cholesterol numbers.
  • Spot hidden risk when LDL looks normal, especially alongside high triglycerides.
  • Clarify mixed results when tests disagree by counting particles that drive plaque.
  • Guide treatment intensity for statins and add-ons when particle burden stays high.
  • Protect higher-risk groups like diabetes or high triglycerides, where particle counts matter.
  • Track your response to lifestyle changes and medications with a stable, reliable marker.
  • Explain residual risk despite low LDL by revealing remaining artery-harming particles.
  • Best interpreted with a full lipid panel, triglycerides, and your overall risk.

What is Apolipoprotein B (ApoB)?

Apolipoprotein B (ApoB) is the structural scaffold protein that builds and stabilizes the body’s cholesterol-carrying particles (lipoproteins). It comes in two forms: ApoB-100 from the liver, which forms very-low-density, intermediate-density, and low-density lipoproteins (VLDL, IDL, LDL) as well as lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)); and ApoB-48 from the intestine, which forms chylomicrons that transport dietary fat. Each of these particles carries exactly one ApoB molecule, so ApoB is essentially the “barcode” that defines each particle’s identity and keeps it in circulation.

ApoB enables the packaging and export of triglycerides and cholesterol from the liver and gut, and guides their delivery to tissues. ApoB-100 also serves as the docking signal for the LDL receptor, allowing the liver to clear LDL from the bloodstream. Because every atherogenic particle (VLDL remnants, IDL, LDL, Lp(a), and chylomicron remnants) contains one ApoB, the amount of ApoB reflects the number of particles capable of depositing cholesterol into artery walls (atherosclerosis). In short, ApoB captures the particle count that drives cholesterol transport and arterial exposure, linking lipoprotein biology to cardiovascular strain.

Why is Apolipoprotein B (ApoB) important?

Apolipoprotein B (ApoB) is the “one-per-particle” protein on all atherogenic lipoproteins—VLDL, IDL, LDL, and Lp(a). Because each of these particles carries exactly one ApoB, its level is essentially a count of artery-entering particles. That makes ApoB a direct gauge of plaque-building traffic affecting the heart, brain, kidneys, and other vascular beds.

Most labs report a broad adult reference range. For cardiovascular protection, risk generally falls as ApoB moves toward the lower end of that range, because fewer particles means less arterial exposure, regardless of how much cholesterol each particle carries.

When values are low, it usually reflects healthy, efficient lipid transport with fewer circulating particles. Very low levels can signal genetics that limit ApoB production or conditions that impair fat absorption or liver synthesis. In those rare settings, people may develop fat‑soluble vitamin deficiencies, digestive issues, neuropathy or vision problems, and in children, poor growth; these extremes are uncommon in routine care.

When values are high, many ApoB‑containing particles are available to cross the arterial lining, deposit lipids, and drive foam cell formation and plaque. This state often travels with insulin resistance, abdominal adiposity, fatty liver, hypothyroidism, kidney disease, or elevated Lp(a). Men tend to have higher ApoB earlier in life; women often rise after menopause. Pregnancy naturally raises ApoB as lipids increase to support the fetus.

Big picture: ApoB links lipid metabolism to vascular biology more tightly than cholesterol concentration alone. It integrates liver production, triglyceride handling, and particle clearance, and aligns closely with lifetime risk of atherosclerotic events. Paired with LDL-C, triglycerides, HbA1c, and inflammatory markers, ApoB clarifies cardiometabolic risk and long‑term vascular health.

What Insights Will I Get?

Apolipoprotein B (ApoB) is the structural protein on all “bad” cholesterol particles—VLDL, IDL, LDL, and lipoprotein(a). Each particle carries one ApoB, so ApoB is a direct count of atherogenic particles. It links liver lipid export to blood-vessel exposure, making it a core signal for cardiovascular risk. Because these particles traffic energy (triglycerides) and cholesterol for membranes and hormones, ApoB also reflects metabolic health, liver–insulin signaling, vascular brain health, and placental/ovarian function.

Low values usually reflect fewer atherogenic particles from lower production or faster clearance. This often means lower artery-wall exposure and reduced atherosclerosis risk. Marked lows can occur with genetic hypobetalipoproteinemia or poor nutrient absorption, where transport of fats and fat‑soluble vitamins is impaired. Children and premenopausal women tend to run lower; pregnancy typically does not.

Being in range suggests adequate lipid delivery to tissues without oversupplying the endothelium. It points to balanced hepatic lipoprotein handling, better insulin sensitivity, and a calmer vascular inflammatory milieu. For heart protection, expert consensus places optimal toward the lower end of the usual lab range.

High values usually reflect overproduction of VLDL/LDL or reduced clearance of ApoB particles (insulin resistance, fatty liver, hypothyroidism, kidney disease, or LDL‑receptor pathway disorders), with additional contribution from high lipoprotein(a). System effects include higher risk of heart attack and stroke, vascular cognitive impairment, and pregnancy complications tied to endothelial dysfunction. Levels rise with age and after menopause; familial hypercholesterolemia drives very high values.

Notes: ApoB can be measured nonfasting and directly counts atherogenic particles; acute illness may transiently lower it. Pregnancy increases ApoB; menopause, nephrotic syndrome, and some drugs raise it, while lipid‑lowering therapies reduce it. High Lp(a) slightly elevates ApoB but is not fully captured by it.

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membership

$17

/month
Billed annually at $199
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Your membership includes one comprehensive blood draw each year, covering 100+ biomarkers in a single collection
One appointment, one draw for your annual panel.
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Frequently Asked Questions

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How it works
What should I expect during a blood draw?
  • A trained phlebotomist will guide you through the process.
  • A tourniquet is placed on your arm, the site is cleaned, and a small needle is used to collect blood into one or more tubes.
  • Results are usually ready in about a week.
  • Most people feel only a quick pinch.
  • The needle is removed, gentle pressure is applied, and a bandage is placed.
How do I prepare for a blood draw?
  • Drink plenty of water beforehand — hydration makes veins easier to find.
  • Wear loose sleeves so your arm is easy to access.
  • Follow any fasting instructions you’ve been given.
  • Let us know if you’re on medications, have fainted before, or have needle anxiety.
What should I do after my blood draw?
  • Press gently on the site for a few minutes.
  • Keep the bandage on for 4-6 hours.
  • Skip heavy lifting or strenuous exercise for the rest of the day.
  • Drink extra water to rehydrate.
  • Monitor the site for redness, swelling, or pain.
How do I book a blood draw with Superpower?

Your membership includes:

  • An annual full body test and report across 100+ biomarkers
  • A personalized action plan to optimize your biomarkers and reach your health goals
  • A dashboard to centralize your health data and track changes across a lifetime
  • Access to a health concierge for questions on your plan and help scheduling
  • Plus a marketplace of curated health products and services cheaper than amazon

Many concierge clinics charge $10k – $100k for their services, we’ve built technology to make the world’s best healthcare as accessible as possible via an all-in-one membership.

Where can I take my blood test?

Superpower is currently available in the following US states:

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Our testing
Does Superpower replace my primary care provider?

Superpower specializes in prevention-based testing and treatments and is not intended for emergency or immediate health issues.

While you will have a Superpower care team, your annual membership is designed to complement a primary care doctor if you have one, not replace them.

We are happy to help you share any test results with an outside provider to ensure you receive well-rounded medical care.

How fast are blood test results and how do I read them?

Your annual lab test panel takes about 10 days to process. We will text you as soon as they become available in your dashboard. Other types of tests may have different testing windows. The Superpower concierge is your own health assistant who helps answer your questions on your results, ensure smooth scheduling, coordination of any office-based tests, specialist referrals as needed, and navigating you to interface with your care team.

Does Superpower accept health insurance?

Superpower membership and products are all eligible for HSA/FSA funding.

We see Superpower like a gym membership for those committed to prevention and performance. Superpower is a bridge between wellness and healthcare. Health insurance traditionally focuses on reactive care whereas, at Superpower, we believe it’s never too early to start looking out for your long-term health.

What if I want more than 1 blood test per year?

Absolutely — you're not limited to just one. Your membership includes one comprehensive 100+ biomarker blood test each year, but if you'd like to track your progress more closely, you can add extra tests at any time. Each additional full-panel test costs $179. You can order as many as you'd like throughout the year.

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Frequently Asked Questions about Apolipoprotein B (ApoB)

What is Apolipoprotein B (ApoB) testing?

It measures ApoB concentration in blood, reflecting the number of atherogenic lipoprotein particles and risk of atherosclerosis.

Why should I test ApoB levels?

It clarifies particle-level risk, detects LDL-C/ApoB discordance, and tracks how lifestyle or therapies affect your particle burden.

How often should I test ApoB?

Recheck at consistent intervals, especially when adjusting diet, training, or therapies, to establish and monitor trends.

What can affect ApoB levels?

Genetics, insulin resistance, diet quality, hypothyroidism, kidney disease, high triglycerides, and Lp(a) all influence ApoB.

Are there preparations needed before testing?

Strict fasting is not required, though you may follow fasting instructions if pairing with a lipid panel.

How accurate is ApoB testing?

ApoB assays are standardized and reproducible, providing reliable, consistent results.

What happens if results are outside the optimal range?

Elevated ApoB signals higher particle burden. Use results to refine lifestyle, therapy, and follow-up testing.

Can lifestyle changes affect ApoB?

Yes. Nutrition, regular exercise, weight management, sleep, and stress regulation all help lower ApoB.

How do I interpret ApoB results?

Interpret ApoB alongside LDL-C, non-HDL-C, triglycerides, HDL-C, and Lp(a) to understand overall risk.

Is ApoB testing right for me?

Yes—particularly if you have insulin resistance, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, or unexplained risk despite “normal” LDL-C.

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