Why Heart Disease Still Catches People Off Guard
Coronary artery disease (CAD) — the buildup of fatty plaques in the arteries that feed the heart — is the world's leading cause of death. Yet many people who suffer heart attacks had no idea they were in danger. Existing risk tools catch some cases, but they often miss people whose risk is driven by insulin resistance (when the body doesn't use blood sugar efficiently) rather than just high cholesterol.
This gap matters because insulin resistance is rising fast, driven by diets high in refined carbohydrates and sugar, physical inactivity, and increasing rates of obesity. Catching this type of risk earlier could help millions of people take action before serious damage occurs.
The Old Approach and What It Misses
Standard cardiac risk calculators focus on age, blood pressure, smoking, and LDL cholesterol (the "bad" type). These work reasonably well for some patients, but they were not designed to capture the metabolic picture — the complex way that fat metabolism, blood sugar regulation, and body weight interact to damage arteries over time.
But here's the twist: a growing body of research suggests that combining triglycerides (a type of fat in the blood) and fasting glucose (blood sugar measured after not eating) into a single index — the TyG index — captures something important that the old measures miss. And this study went further, combining the TyG index with multiple measures of body size and fat distribution to see which combinations predict heart disease best.
Think of the TyG index like a two-ingredient recipe for arterial stress. Triglycerides and glucose each cause problems on their own when elevated. But together, they signal a state of metabolic imbalance — the body is struggling to manage both fat and sugar — that is particularly damaging to artery walls.
When both numbers are high, the lining of blood vessels becomes inflamed and sticky. Fat molecules get trapped in artery walls more easily. Over time, this process builds the plaques that narrow or block coronary arteries. The TyG index captures this combined stress in a single number that is easy to calculate from a routine blood draw.
Who Was Studied
This retrospective observational study analyzed records from 3,641 patients who underwent coronary angiography (a procedure using dye and imaging to examine the heart's arteries directly) for the first time at a hospital in China. Researchers used multiple statistical methods to test how well the TyG index — and seven variations that combined it with measures of body size — predicted whether patients had coronary artery disease.
The TyG index alone was a strong predictor of CAD. Patients with higher TyG scores were about 64 percent more likely to have coronary artery disease than those with lower scores, after adjusting for other risk factors like age, sex, smoking, and blood pressure.
When researchers combined the TyG index with a measure called the waist-to-height ratio (a simple way to estimate how much fat is carried around the middle), the combined score performed about as well as TyG alone. Other body-size combinations were less accurate. Importantly, the analysis also showed that a blood marker called HbA1c — which reflects average blood sugar over the past three months — partially explains the connection between TyG and heart disease. About 28 percent of TyG's effect on heart disease risk appears to work through this blood sugar pathway.
This doesn't mean the TyG index is ready to replace existing risk calculators — it means it may be a useful addition to them.
What Experts Are Making of This
The finding that HbA1c partially mediates the TyG-CAD relationship is significant. It suggests that blood sugar control is not just a consequence of metabolic problems — it may be one of the key mechanisms connecting metabolic dysfunction to artery damage. This supports the idea that managing blood sugar aggressively, even in people who do not yet have diabetes, could reduce cardiovascular risk. The research adds to a body of evidence pushing toward more metabolically informed heart risk assessment.
If you have a history of high triglycerides or blood sugar, or if you have been told you are at risk for or have prediabetes, ask your doctor to review your complete metabolic panel in the context of your heart health. The TyG index is not a standard part of most cardiac risk assessments yet, but the numbers needed to calculate it are often already in your lab work. This is also a strong argument for weight management and dietary changes that lower both triglycerides and blood sugar — a two-for-one benefit for heart health.
Limitations to Be Aware Of
This was a retrospective study — meaning researchers looked back at existing records rather than following patients forward over time. That design cannot prove that high TyG causes heart disease, only that the two are associated. The study was conducted at a single center in China, so the findings may not apply equally to other populations. The authors also caution that combining TyG with body-size measures needs further validation before clinical use.
Prospective studies — where patients are enrolled and followed forward in time — are needed to confirm whether the TyG index can reliably predict future heart attacks, not just current artery disease. Researchers are also investigating whether interventions that specifically lower TyG (such as dietary changes, exercise programs, or certain medications) can reduce CAD risk in parallel. The ultimate goal is a richer, more personalized risk calculator that reflects the full metabolic picture — not just the numbers that have been standard since the 1970s.