Calcium Score by Age: Understanding Your CT Heart Scan Results
Author
ABS Research Team
Published: November 21, 2025
Last Update: November 21, 2025
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Home » Health » Calcium Score by Age: Understanding Your CT Heart Scan Results
Table of Contents
- What Your Calcium Score Means for Heart Health
- Normal Calcium Score Ranges by Age
- Factors That Can Affect Your CT Heart Scan Results
- When Elevated Calcium Scores Require Further Testing
- Understanding Plaque Burden, Percentile Ranking & Risk
- Proactive Heart Health Monitoring
- Next Steps Based on Your CT Heart Scan Results
It’s completely normal to feel anxious or confused when you receive your CT Heart Scan (coronary calcium score) results. As specialists who review thousands of calcium scores every year, we see the same questions over and over: Is my number normal for my age? Does this mean heart disease? Should I be worried right now?
Here’s what you need to know: a calcium score of 0 is ideal at any age. But for many people, especially over age 50, some calcium is expected. What’s most important isn’t just the number—it’s how your score compares to others your age and whether your arteries show early signs of atherosclerosis that could increase your risk.
Understanding your age-specific calcium score helps you make confident, informed decisions about your heart health—instead of guessing, worrying, or waiting for symptoms that often appear too late.
What Your Calcium Score Means for Heart Health
Your CT Heart Scan measures hardened calcium deposits in the coronary arteries—the vessels that supply your heart muscle with blood. Think of calcium as your heart’s early warning system. It shows us whether plaque has been building quietly over many years.
Here’s something that surprises many people: calcium itself is not the problem—it’s the indicator. Calcium forms as plaque becomes more mature, revealing disease that has often been developing silently long before symptoms appear.
CT Heart Scans are quick, noninvasive, and painless. There are:
- No needles
- No contrast dye
- No lengthy recovery time
Doctors use calcium scoring to:
- Detect early coronary artery disease (CAD)
- Predict heart attack risk over the next 5–10 years
- Guide decisions about cholesterol and blood pressure management
- Prioritize lifestyle changes where they matter most
- Track plaque progression over time
Your calcium score tells an important part of your story—but it’s just one chapter. Your full risk picture includes your age, cholesterol, blood pressure, family history, diabetes status, weight, and lifestyle.
Normal Calcium Score Ranges by Age
Age plays a major role in interpreting CT Heart Scan results. A score that might be concerning for a 45-year-old could be relatively common in someone in their late 60s.
Here is a general way to think about calcium scores by age, remembering that “normal” is not the same as “ideal”:
Men & Women in Their 40s (40–49 years)
- Ideal score: 0
- Typical healthy range: 0–10
- A score above 10 suggests early plaque development.
Men & Women in Their 50s (50–59 years)
- Ideal score: 0
- Typical healthy range: 0–100
- Scores above 100 usually require closer evaluation and risk factor treatment.
Men & Women in Their 60s (60–69 years)
- Ideal score: 0
- Typical range: 0–300
- Scores above 300 reflect significant plaque burden.
Men & Women 70+ years
- Ideal score: 0
- Typical range: 0–400+
- Very high scores still require evaluation and risk management.
These age-adjusted ranges help identify whether plaque buildup is normal for age or unusually high.
Factors That Can Affect Your CT Heart Scan Results
Understanding what influences your calcium score helps you interpret your results with confidence.
Genetics & Family History
A strong family history can lead to early plaque formation.
Cholesterol & Blood Pressure
High LDL cholesterol and uncontrolled blood pressure accelerate plaque buildup.
Diabetes & Metabolic Health
These conditions make plaque more likely to form and calcify.
Lifestyle Factors
- Smoking
- Lack of exercise
- Poor diet
- High stress
Medications
Statins can stabilize plaque, sometimes slightly increasing calcium as plaque becomes less dangerous.
When Elevated Calcium Scores Require Further Testing
Not every elevated score means a heart attack is imminent, but certain values require more evaluation.
1–99: Early Plaque
- Indicates early coronary artery disease
- Often leads to lifestyle changes
100–399: Moderate Plaque
- Indicates significant plaque burden
- Higher risk of future cardiac events
- Often prompts medication and close follow-up
400+: High Plaque
- Associated with increased heart attack risk
- Typically requires further testing and specialist evaluation
Understanding Plaque Burden, Percentile Ranking & Risk
Total Plaque Burden
Represents the total amount of calcified plaque present.
Percentile Ranking
Shows how your score compares to people your age and sex.
Plaque Distribution
Identifies which arteries contain plaque and whether the buildup is widespread.
Proactive Heart Health Monitoring
Establishing a Baseline
A first CT Heart Scan between ages 40–55 creates a valuable baseline.
Regular Risk Screening
- Blood pressure
- Cholesterol
- Blood sugar
- Lifestyle factors
Lifestyle Foundations
Exercise, nutrition, sleep, and avoiding tobacco all help slow plaque formation.
Communication with Your Provider
Keep track of your results and ask how your score fits into your overall risk.
Next Steps Based on Your CT Heart Scan Results
If Your Score Is 0
- Excellent sign
- Continue heart-healthy habits
If Your Score Is 1–99
- Early plaque buildup
- Requires lifestyle improvements
If Your Score Is 100–399
- Significant plaque
- More aggressive treatment may be needed
If Your Score Is 400+
- High long-term risk
- Requires further evaluation and management
Your CT Heart Scan is a powerful preventive tool that provides far more clarity than traditional risk calculators.
At Advanced Body Scan, our specialists provide comprehensive calcium scoring and expert interpretation to help you make confident, informed decisions about your heart health.
Ready to take control of your heart health journey? Schedule your CT Heart Scan with Advanced Body Scan today.