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Inflammation

Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) Biomarker Test

A composite marker linking immune activity and HDL protection for clearer cardiovascular insight.

MHR is a calculated marker that combines your absolute monocyte count with your HDL cholesterol level. Monocytes are a type of white blood cell involved in inflammation and plaque formation within blood vessels. HDL supports reverse cholesterol transport and carries antioxidant and anti-inflammatory proteins.

The ratio reflects the balance between pro-inflammatory cellular activity and anti-inflammatory, protective lipoproteins.

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

Key Benefits

  • See your inflammation–protection balance by comparing monocytes to HDL cholesterol.
  • Spot early cardiometabolic risk tied to chronic inflammation and low protective HDL.
  • Clarify borderline lipid results by adding inflammation context to risk discussions.
  • Guide lifestyle and medication discussions when standard risk scores feel borderline.
  • Track response to exercise, weight loss, diet quality, or smoking cessation across months.
  • Flag possible insulin resistance or fatty liver risk when combined with other markers.
  • Explain artery inflammation burden beyond LDL by integrating immune cells with HDL.
  • Best interpreted with a CBC, lipid panel, hs-CRP, and your clinical picture.

What is Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR)?

The Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) is a simple index that compares the number of circulating monocytes with the level of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Monocytes are frontline white blood cells (innate immune leukocytes) produced in the bone marrow that patrol the bloodstream and can enter tissues to become macrophages or dendritic cells. HDL is the “scavenger” lipoprotein (high-density lipoprotein) assembled mainly in the liver and intestine that ferries cholesterol out of tissues and back to the liver (reverse cholesterol transport) and carries enzymes and proteins with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity.

By relating a pro-inflammatory cell population to an anti-inflammatory, cholesterol-removing carrier, MHR captures the body’s balance between immune activation and protective lipid transport. Monocyte burden reflects innate immune tone, while HDL reflects cholesterol efflux and detoxifying capacity; their ratio therefore mirrors the inflammatory and oxidative environment that bathes blood vessels and metabolic tissues (endothelial milieu). In short, MHR is a compact readout of the tug-of-war between monocyte-driven inflammation and HDL-mediated homeostasis, offering an integrated view of how immunity and lipid handling intersect in everyday physiology.

Why is Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) important?

Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) captures the tug‑of‑war between inflammation and protection in your bloodstream: monocytes, the immune cells that drive plaque formation, divided by HDL, the lipoprotein that calms inflammation and ferries cholesterol out of artery walls. It matters because it links immunity, lipid handling, and the health of the endothelium that lines every blood vessel.

There isn’t a single universal reference range; studies interpret MHR by population percentiles. In general, values toward the lower end are considered more favorable, reflecting quieter immune activation and stronger HDL “cleanup” capacity. Typical mid‑range values suggest a balanced inflammatory tone and are usually symptom‑free. Women often run lower than men because HDL tends to be higher; during pregnancy, physiological rises in monocytes can push the ratio upward.

When the ratio is low, it often reflects robust HDL function and/or fewer circulating monocytes—signals of lower atherogenic pressure. People feel fine. If it’s very low due to true monocytopenia, that can point to bone‑marrow suppression or certain infections, sometimes showing up as recurrent infections or slow wound healing, though this is uncommon.

Higher ratios mean more monocyte activity and/or lower HDL. That combination favors endothelial stress, plaque growth, and oxidative injury. It’s frequently silent but associates with insulin resistance, fatty liver, chronic kidney stress, and higher long‑term risk of heart attack and stroke. Men, and people with chronic inflammatory conditions, more often sit higher.

Big picture: MHR integrates immune drive with lipid transport. It complements LDL, HDL, triglycerides, hs‑CRP, and the neutrophil‑to‑lymphocyte ratio, helping frame cardiovascular and metabolic risk over time rather than giving a standalone diagnosis.

What Insights Will I Get?

Monocyte-to-HDL ratio (MHR) combines circulating monocytes—innate immune cells—with HDL cholesterol, which clears cholesterol and tempers inflammation. It captures the balance between inflammatory drive and anti-inflammatory/antioxidant capacity, reflecting endothelial health, plaque biology, and broader cardiometabolic resilience.

Low values usually reflect fewer circulating monocytes and/or higher HDL. This pattern signals a lower inflammatory burden, efficient reverse cholesterol transport, and steadier endothelial tone. When very low because of monocytopenia, it can indicate reduced immune cell production or function and a higher susceptibility to certain infections.

Being in range suggests balanced innate immunity with adequate HDL protection, supporting stable energy metabolism and healthy vascular function. In studies, cardiovascular risk tends to be lowest toward the lower end of typical ranges. Sex and age shape baseline levels, with premenopausal women often lower due to higher HDL.

High values usually reflect heightened monocyte activity and/or reduced HDL protection. Physiologically this aligns with endothelial dysfunction, oxidative stress, foam-cell formation, and insulin resistance. Higher MHR has been linked with hypertension, chronic kidney disease, fatty liver, and atherosclerotic events; in pregnancy, higher values have been reported in hypertensive disorders.

Notes: Interpret MHR in the context of acute illness, recent surgery, or infection, which can transiently raise monocytes. HDL and monocyte counts vary with age, sex, smoking, and medications that alter lipids or white-cell kinetics. Assays and cutoffs are not uniform across labs, so trends over time are most informative.

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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.
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Your membership includes:

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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.

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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.

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Frequently Asked Questions about Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR)

What is Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) testing?

MHR is calculated from two routine labs: absolute monocyte count (from a CBC with differential) and HDL cholesterol (from a lipid panel). It reflects the balance between inflammatory white blood cell activity and HDL’s protective capacity.

Why should I test my Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR)?

Testing MHR adds context to standard CBC and lipid results, helping identify when immune activity is high relative to HDL protection and supporting earlier, more personalized prevention.

How often should I test Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR)?

Test at intervals that let you detect trends rather than single-day noise. Many people retest periodically (for example, quarterly) or during periods of lifestyle or therapy change. Keep collection conditions consistent.

What can affect my Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR)?

Smoking, sleep, visceral fat, fitness status, acute infections, recent strenuous exercise, and glucocorticoids can shift monocytes, HDL, or both, influencing the ratio.

Are there any preparations needed before Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) testing?

No special preparation is required beyond what’s typical for a CBC and lipid panel. Consistent timing, activity, and meal patterns improve comparisons over time.

How accurate is Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) testing?

Accuracy depends on the underlying CBC and lipid measurements. When these are obtained with standardized laboratory methods, the derived ratio is reliable for trend analysis.

What happens if my Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) is outside the optimal range?

A higher ratio suggests more inflammatory pressure relative to HDL protection; a lower ratio suggests a more favorable balance. Use the result to prioritize changes in nutrition, movement, sleep, stress, and tobacco exposure, and to evaluate related cardiometabolic markers.

Can lifestyle changes affect my Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR)?

Yes. Improvements in diet quality, physical activity, sleep, stress management, and smoking cessation can influence monocyte counts, HDL levels, and the resulting ratio.

How do I interpret my Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) results?

Interpret MHR alongside context such as ApoB, LDL-C, triglycerides, hs-CRP, fasting glucose, A1c, body composition, and training load. Track direction over time rather than relying on a single value.

Is Monocyte-to-HDL Ratio (MHR) testing right for me?

MHR is useful for anyone interested in linking inflammatory and lipid signals, adding depth to standard lab panels, and monitoring cardiometabolic risk over time.

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