Why Younger Adults Are at Risk
Coronary artery disease (CAD) means the arteries that supply blood to the heart have become narrowed or blocked. When blockages are complex — meaning multiple vessels are involved or blockages are severe — the risk of heart attack rises significantly. Finding this complexity early gives doctors more time to act.
The challenge is that standard risk tools often miss younger adults. Current scoring systems were built largely around older populations and focus on things like age and kidney function. For a 45-year-old with metabolic issues, these tools may underestimate the danger.
Two Different Scores, Two Different Patients
Doctors have used various tools to predict heart disease risk. The ACEF score measures physiological reserve — basically, how well someone's heart and kidneys are functioning. For many patients, it works well.
But here's the twist: this study found that in younger and middle-aged adults who also have calcium deposits on their aortic valve (the valve between the heart and the main artery), the ACEF score loses its predictive power almost entirely. A different tool — the TyG index — takes over.
What the TyG Index Measures
The TyG index is calculated from two routine blood tests: your triglyceride level (a type of fat in the blood) and your fasting glucose level (blood sugar). Think of it like a check-engine light for insulin resistance — a condition where your body struggles to use insulin properly, causing sugar and fat to pile up in the bloodstream.
When insulin resistance is high, the arteries experience chronic low-level damage. Over time, this damage contributes to the buildup of fatty plaques inside coronary arteries. In patients who also have calcium deposits on their aortic valve, this metabolic stress appears to be the dominant driver of complex artery disease — more important than physical reserve or age-related wear.
Who Was Studied
This cross-sectional study enrolled 326 consecutive patients between 18 and 65 years old who were undergoing coronary angiography (a procedure that uses dye and X-ray to visualize the arteries of the heart) at a single hospital. After excluding patients who had prior procedures on their arteries, 260 patients formed the final analysis group. Researchers used echocardiography (heart ultrasound) to identify who had aortic valve calcification and then compared how well each scoring tool predicted complex artery disease in those with and without the valve finding.
In patients with aortic valve calcification, the TyG index was a strong, independent predictor of complex coronary artery disease. Patients with a high TyG index were nearly four times more likely to have complex disease. The ACEF score, on the other hand, showed no significant predictive value in this group.
Flip the group — patients without valve calcification — and the results reversed. The ACEF score was the stronger predictor, and the TyG index added little.
This doesn't mean a simple blood calculation replaces a full cardiac workup — it means it could help doctors prioritize who needs one sooner.
One finding surprised the researchers: despite having more anatomically severe coronary disease, patients with aortic valve calcification had fewer heart attacks than those without. This may be because calcium buildup develops slowly over time, allowing the body to compensate in ways that reduce the risk of sudden rupture — but more research is needed to understand this.
What Experts Make of This
This finding adds to a growing body of evidence that heart disease in younger adults is often metabolically driven rather than simply age-related wear. Insulin resistance, poor blood sugar control, and high triglycerides appear to work together to damage arteries in ways that standard age-based scoring systems miss. Identifying patients by their metabolic fingerprint — rather than just their age — could allow earlier, more targeted intervention.
If you are under 65 and have been told you have calcium on your aortic valve, ask your doctor whether your triglyceride and fasting glucose levels have been checked recently. The TyG index can be calculated from standard blood tests your doctor likely already orders. It is not a standalone diagnostic tool, but it may be one more useful piece of information in a conversation about your heart health.
Limitations to Know
This was a single-center study with 260 patients — a relatively small group. Because it was cross-sectional (a snapshot in time), it cannot prove that high TyG causes complex artery disease, only that the two are associated. The findings need to be replicated in larger, more diverse populations before they can be widely applied.
Researchers are calling for larger multicenter studies to confirm these findings across different populations and ethnicities. If the TyG index proves reliable in those settings, it could be incorporated into standard cardiac risk calculators for younger patients — particularly those with known metabolic risk factors or early valve changes. The goal is a more precise, personalized approach to identifying who needs more aggressive monitoring or earlier treatment.