Triglyceride
Triglyceride is a clinical biomarker on the Liver panel, reported in mg/dL. Standard reference range: 0–149 mg/dL. Functional (optimal) range used by integrative practitioners: 50–125 mg/dL.
What is Triglyceride?
Triglycerides are the primary form of stored fat in adipose tissue; fasting serum levels reflect dietary fat intake, hepatic lipogenesis from excess carbohydrates, and lipolysis.
Reference ranges
| Range type | Value (mg/dL) | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Standard (lab) | 0–149 | Typical Quest / LabCorp adult reference |
| Functional (optimal) | 50–125 | Integrative / functional medicine consensus |
How SomaVue interprets Triglyceride
SomaVue maps every result for Triglyceride against four clinical lenses — nutrient cofactors, toxin exposure, infection drivers, and circadian/hormonal context — and connects each interpretation to specific peer-reviewed citations. Pre-mapped clinical reasoning and cross-marker pattern detection are available inside the practitioner workspace.
See the full interpretation
Upload a patient PDF or enter values manually to see the four-lens analysis, cross-marker patterns, and cited evidence for Triglyceride and 205 other markers.
Try it freeEducational reference only. Reference ranges vary by laboratory, assay method, age, sex, and clinical context. Functional ranges represent integrative-medicine consensus and are not regulatory thresholds. SomaVue does not diagnose, treat, mitigate, or prevent disease. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider.