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Insulin Resistance: The Silent Driver of Heart Disease

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An estimated 88 million American adults — roughly one in three — have insulin resistance. Most have no idea. Their fasting glucose may be normal. Their A1c may be normal. Nothing on their standard lab work raises a flag. And yet, silently, their cardiovascular risk is accumulating at a rate that their apparent health profile does not suggest.

Insulin resistance is not a single discrete disease. It is a physiological state in which cells throughout the body — particularly in skeletal muscle, liver, and adipose tissue — become progressively less responsive to insulin signaling. The pancreas compensates by producing more insulin. For a period that can last years or decades, blood glucose remains normal — but fasting and postprandial insulin levels are elevated, quietly driving a cascade of metabolic changes that accelerate atherosclerosis.

As a cardiologist, I think about insulin resistance constantly — not because it's a diabetes problem, but because it's a cardiovascular problem that begins long before diabetes develops.

The Mechanism: How Insulin Resistance Harms the Heart

Insulin resistance doesn't damage the heart through a single pathway. It operates through multiple simultaneous mechanisms:

1

Dyslipidemia of insulin resistance

Elevated insulin stimulates hepatic VLDL production, increasing triglycerides. This drives a shift in LDL particle distribution toward smaller, denser, more atherogenic particles — without necessarily changing LDL-C. ApoB rises while LDL-C appears normal. HDL falls. This lipid pattern is one of the most atherogenic in clinical medicine.

2

Endothelial dysfunction

Hyperinsulinemia impairs nitric oxide production in the endothelium — the single-cell layer lining every blood vessel. Nitric oxide normally causes vasodilation and protects against atherosclerosis initiation. When it's reduced, the endothelium becomes "sticky," promotes platelet aggregation, and loses its primary anti-atherogenic function.

3

Chronic low-grade inflammation

Visceral adipose tissue — the metabolically active fat that accumulates around the abdominal organs — secretes pro-inflammatory cytokines including TNF-alpha, IL-6, and resistin. These promote arterial wall inflammation, endothelial activation, and the oxidative modification of LDL particles that initiates plaque formation.

4

Hypertension

Insulin resistance increases sympathetic nervous system activity and promotes renal sodium retention, driving blood pressure upward. Elevated insulin also directly stimulates smooth muscle cell proliferation in arterial walls, contributing to arterial stiffening.

5

Prothrombotic state

Insulin resistance elevates plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), impairing fibrinolysis and creating a pro-clotting environment. Combined with endothelial dysfunction and platelet hyperreactivity, this dramatically increases the risk that vulnerable plaque will rupture and cause an acute coronary event.

Why Standard Labs Miss It

The standard metabolic panel checks fasting glucose and, if ordered, hemoglobin A1c. Both measure the downstream effects of insulin resistance — elevated blood sugar — not insulin resistance itself. By the time fasting glucose reaches the prediabetic range (100–125 mg/dL), insulin resistance has typically been present for years or decades. The pancreatic beta cells have been working overtime to compensate, and early atherosclerosis may already be under way.

The Diagnostic Gap

A patient with fasting glucose of 92 mg/dL (technically "normal"), triglycerides of 190, HDL of 38, blood pressure of 132/84, and a waist circumference of 38 inches has multiple features of insulin resistance — but nothing on their standard lab work would trigger intervention. Every individual marker is either normal or "borderline." Together, they represent a high-risk metabolic pattern.

How to Actually Detect Insulin Resistance

The gold standard for measuring insulin resistance is the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp — a complex research procedure not suitable for clinical practice. In real-world cardiology, several accessible markers can be used in combination:

Clinical Markers of Insulin Resistance

Fasting insulinOptimal: < 8 μIU/mL; IR likely if > 15
HOMA-IR[Glucose × Insulin ÷ 405]; IR if > 2.5–3.0
TriglyceridesIR pattern: > 150 mg/dL
TG/HDL ratioStrong proxy; > 3.0 suggests small dense LDL
Fasting glucoseSensitivity low until late-stage IR
Hemoglobin A1cUseful; normal doesn't exclude early IR
Waist circumferenceMen >40 in, Women >35 in: high-risk
ApoBOften elevated due to IR-driven VLDL overproduction

The triglyceride/HDL ratio is one of the most practical and underused proxies for insulin resistance and small dense LDL. A ratio above 3.0 in a fasting sample is a strong signal that warrants further evaluation. A ratio above 5.0 is associated with a high probability of small dense LDL pattern — the most atherogenic lipid phenotype.

Insulin Resistance and the Lipid Panel: The Hidden Disconnect

This is where insulin resistance becomes directly relevant to cardiovascular risk assessment. A patient with insulin resistance can have an LDL-C of 105 mg/dL — within normal range — while carrying an ApoB of 125 mg/dL and an LDL particle number in the highest quartile. Their atherogenic particle burden is high. Their standard panel says otherwise.

This discordance between LDL-C and particle burden is not a statistical anomaly — it is a predictable consequence of insulin resistance physiology. It is one of the primary reasons I measure ApoB in every patient: in an insulin-resistant population (which describes a significant fraction of adults over 40), LDL-C routinely underestimates atherogenic exposure.

Metabolic Syndrome: Insulin Resistance Made Official

Metabolic syndrome is the clinical codification of insulin resistance. A diagnosis requires three or more of the following five criteria:

Metabolic syndrome is present in approximately 35% of U.S. adults and is associated with a two- to three-fold increase in cardiovascular disease risk, independent of traditional risk factors. Its presence should prompt aggressive preventive evaluation — including ApoB, Lp(a), and consideration of CAC scoring.

Can Insulin Resistance Be Reversed?

Yes — and this is one of the most clinically meaningful areas of modern preventive cardiology. Unlike Lp(a) (genetically fixed) or age (immutable), insulin resistance is substantially modifiable through behavioral and pharmacological intervention.

Lifestyle interventions with strong evidence:

Pharmacological options:

What I Assess at ElinMed

Every new patient evaluation at ElinMed includes fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, and TG/HDL ratio as standard components of cardiometabolic assessment. Insulin resistance is not a diabetes diagnosis to wait for — it is a cardiovascular risk state to identify and address proactively. In patients with metabolic features, I expand the evaluation to full ApoB, NMR lipoproteins, and CAC scoring where appropriate.

The gap between the cardiovascular impact of insulin resistance and the frequency with which it is identified and managed is one of the most consequential in preventive medicine. Tens of millions of Americans are accumulating arterial damage under the cover of "normal" labs. The tools to detect and reverse this process exist. The will to use them proactively is what separates preventive cardiology from reactive medicine.

Find Out If Insulin Resistance Is Driving Your Risk

A comprehensive metabolic and cardiovascular assessment at ElinMed goes beyond standard labs — measuring fasting insulin, ApoB, TG/HDL, and other markers that reveal what a standard panel hides.

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CN

Dr. Christabel Nyange, MD, MPH, FACC

Board-certified cardiologist and preventive cardiology specialist. Founder of ElinMed Cardiology, a virtual-first practice focused on precision cardiovascular risk assessment and long-term heart health optimization.

Medical Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Individual metabolic and cardiovascular risk assessment should be performed in consultation with a qualified physician.