Body composition

BMI
Body Mass Index. Weight in kilos divided by height in metres, squared. It's a coarse screen — fine at population level, less useful if you're heavily muscled or have an unusual frame.
BMR
Basal Metabolic Rate. The calories your body burns just keeping the lights on: heartbeat, breathing, keeping warm. Usually 60–75% of your total daily energy use.
TDEE
Total Daily Energy Expenditure. BMR multiplied by an activity factor. The number you eat against if you're tracking weight.
BSA
Body Surface Area. Square metres of skin. Hospitals use it to dose chemo and IV fluids — not relevant for weight loss.
WHR
Waist-to-Hip Ratio. Waist divided by hip. Tracks cardiometabolic risk better than BMI for a lot of people.
IBW
Ideal Body Weight. A reference number from older formulas (Devine, Robinson, Miller). Mostly used in pharmacology to dose drugs that distribute through lean tissue.
LBM / FFM
Lean Body Mass / Fat-Free Mass. Your body weight minus the fat. Mostly muscle, bone, organs, and water.

Cardiovascular

SBP / DBP
Systolic / Diastolic Blood Pressure. The two numbers in a blood pressure reading. Systolic is the high one (heart contracting), diastolic the low one (heart relaxing).
MAP
Mean Arterial Pressure. A weighted average of SBP and DBP that approximates the pressure your organs actually see. 70–100 mmHg is the healthy range.
Pulse pressure
Simply SBP − DBP. A wide pulse pressure in older adults is often a sign of stiff arteries.
LDL
Low-Density Lipoprotein. The "bad" cholesterol — higher levels track with cardiovascular events.
HDL
High-Density Lipoprotein. The "good" cholesterol — higher is better.
Triglycerides
Fat circulating in your blood. High levels tend to ride along with insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome.
ASCVD
Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease. Umbrella term for the conditions that plaque build-up causes: heart attack, stroke, peripheral artery disease.
AF / AFib
Atrial Fibrillation. An irregular heart rhythm. A major cause of stroke when left untreated.
CHA₂DS₂-VASc
A 0–9 score that predicts stroke risk in someone with non-valvular AF. Clinicians use it to decide whether to start anticoagulation.

Metabolic & labs

HbA1c
Glycated haemoglobin. Reflects your average blood sugar over the past ~3 months. The headline number for diagnosing and tracking diabetes.
eAG
Estimated Average Glucose. HbA1c translated back into the glucose number you'd see on a finger-stick meter.
HOMA-IR
Homeostatic Model Assessment — Insulin Resistance. A single-draw estimate of how sensitive your tissues are to insulin. Below 1.9 is generally healthy.
TyG
Triglyceride-Glucose index. A cheap proxy for insulin resistance when fasting insulin wasn't measured.
eGFR
Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate. How well your kidneys filter blood. Below 60 mL/min/1.73m² for three months meets the definition of chronic kidney disease.
CKD
Chronic Kidney Disease. Staged G1 (mildest) through G5 (kidney failure) by eGFR.
AST & ALT
Liver enzymes (aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase). Released into the blood when liver cells are stressed.
FIB-4
A non-invasive estimate of advanced liver fibrosis built from age, AST, ALT, and platelet count.
NAFLD
Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. The most common chronic liver disease worldwide; very tied to metabolic syndrome and obesity.

Fitness

HR
Heart rate, in beats per minute.
HRmax
Your estimated maximum heart rate. The Tanaka formula (208 − 0.7 × age) is a better estimate than the old "220 − age" rule for adults.
HRrest
Resting heart rate. Take it first thing in the morning, lying still, before you check your phone.
HRR
Heart Rate Reserve — HRmax − HRrest. The Karvonen formula uses it to set training-zone intensities.
VO₂max
Maximum oxygen uptake while exercising at full tilt. One of the strongest predictors of aerobic fitness and all-cause mortality.
1RM
One-Repetition Maximum. The heaviest weight you can lift once with good form. Most calculators (including ours) estimate it from a multi-rep set so you don't have to actually try a true single.
MET
Metabolic Equivalent. 1 MET ≈ the energy you use sitting quietly. A 6-MET activity uses six times as much.

Units

SI units
Système International. The metric-based standard most labs and most countries use: mmol/L for cholesterol and glucose, µmol/L for creatinine.
US conventional units
mg/dL for cholesterol, glucose, and creatinine. Common in the United States; less so elsewhere.
mmHg
Millimetres of mercury. The pressure unit on blood-pressure cuffs.
bpm
Beats per minute. Heart rate.
mIU/L
Milli-international units per litre. How fasting insulin is reported in most labs.
U/L
Units per litre. The standard reporting unit for liver enzymes and similar.

Missing a term? Drop me a line and I'll add it.