I think there's a a bit of a paradox here: cardiovascular disease is solved biomedically, yet still remains the #1 cause of death worldwide.
From a biomedical standpoint, we have highly accurate biomarkers (e.g., ApoB, Lp(a), hs-CRP), long-term risk prediction models, knowledge of nutritional biochemstry, and next generation drugs like PCSK9 inhibitors and lepodisiran that can lower ApoB and Lp(a) by 90%. So there's no fundamental reason why cardiovascular disease has to be in even the top 10 causes of death.
Practically speaking, providing guideline-recommended preventive care would require ~27 hours per doctor per day. And the incentives are misaligned: health systems profit when hospital beds are full, so they lack the business model to actually invest in prevention.
So it's a clear illustration of a systematic gap between research and care delivery.
Thanks for sharing this and empowering others to improve their heart health outcomes.
I’m not in love with the idea of sharing my biomarkers with multiple health-tech companies and really want a self-hosted solution to import biomarkers from multiple sources such as Apple Health, arbitrary csv and jsons while avoiding duplication.
Claude Code is something that will make this dream a reality for me pretty soon.
Do you have any tips on biomarker data design or import gotchas?
Well, and everyone knows they should exercise, and many know they should avoid dietary saturated fats, but most people neither exercise nor avoid highly fatty foods.
the mainline guideline is more exercise and better diet which is the treatment to much more than just heart disease. that's not something 27 hours of doctors a day can provide unless you give them guns
the treatments reduce risk, but they don't change the fact the human body is very reliant on the heart and increasingly vulnerable to cardiac death with age, even with perfect biomarkers
given the entrenched attitudes and the time it takes to actually get people to do the thing as evidenced by all the contrarians in the thread...
it would take a lot more than that. Ain't no doc got all that time to go through all this with every person who should take cholesterol lowering medicine but wants to argue their internet sourced bs
“Solved problem” is too strong of language, but the cardiologists I follow are generally open about the idea that we have enough tools and knowledges to reasonably prevent and manage it the average person.
Even without medications, we’ve had enough knowledge about diet and lifestyle factors that the average person (excluding generic abnormalities that lead to abnormally high risk) could reasonably avoid heart disease through lifestyle and diet alone. That’s easier said than done for a lot of people in the modern world, so it’s good that we have a few different medications on top of that knowledge.
It's almost entirely a lifestyle problem. Shit diet, lack of exercise, obesity, &c. Overlap maps of obesity and cardiovascular deaths, they're virtually the same
Ages ago, I used to do the typesetting for the _Cardiosource Review Journal_ (lived my life around the publishing schedule because no one else was able to run a WordBASIC macro to do initial formatting, import that into a page layout program, process all the graphics and place them, and generate page proofs early enough that it could be proofed and corrected with a 24hr. turn-around until a postal rate increase killed it) --- cardiologists seem very big on data/analysis, moreso than most other medical fields.
brandonb|1 month ago
From a biomedical standpoint, we have highly accurate biomarkers (e.g., ApoB, Lp(a), hs-CRP), long-term risk prediction models, knowledge of nutritional biochemstry, and next generation drugs like PCSK9 inhibitors and lepodisiran that can lower ApoB and Lp(a) by 90%. So there's no fundamental reason why cardiovascular disease has to be in even the top 10 causes of death.
Practically speaking, providing guideline-recommended preventive care would require ~27 hours per doctor per day. And the incentives are misaligned: health systems profit when hospital beds are full, so they lack the business model to actually invest in prevention.
So it's a clear illustration of a systematic gap between research and care delivery.
lm28469|1 month ago
Because most people don't give a shit about their health, no amount of pills will save you if you eat like the average american.
vladgur|1 month ago
I’m not in love with the idea of sharing my biomarkers with multiple health-tech companies and really want a self-hosted solution to import biomarkers from multiple sources such as Apple Health, arbitrary csv and jsons while avoiding duplication.
Claude Code is something that will make this dream a reality for me pretty soon.
Do you have any tips on biomarker data design or import gotchas?
loeg|1 month ago
dubeye|1 month ago
the mainline guideline is more exercise and better diet which is the treatment to much more than just heart disease. that's not something 27 hours of doctors a day can provide unless you give them guns
the treatments reduce risk, but they don't change the fact the human body is very reliant on the heart and increasingly vulnerable to cardiac death with age, even with perfect biomarkers
dogmatism|1 month ago
it would take a lot more than that. Ain't no doc got all that time to go through all this with every person who should take cholesterol lowering medicine but wants to argue their internet sourced bs
Aurornis|1 month ago
Even without medications, we’ve had enough knowledge about diet and lifestyle factors that the average person (excluding generic abnormalities that lead to abnormally high risk) could reasonably avoid heart disease through lifestyle and diet alone. That’s easier said than done for a lot of people in the modern world, so it’s good that we have a few different medications on top of that knowledge.
dubeye|1 month ago
So it comes down to definition of 'resaonably'. diet and excercise will 'reasonably' reduce risk of most disease.
lm28469|1 month ago
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/4187653/10321616/dea...
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/images/th...
WillAdams|1 month ago
agumonkey|1 month ago
unknown|1 month ago
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bilsbie|1 month ago
noitpmeder|1 month ago
medstrom|1 month ago