Heart disease should be treated just like cancer, says guest Mike McConnell, an author and expert in preventive cardiology at Stanford: Detect and stage early, then treat aggressively. In his practice, McConnell focuses on using low-dose CT imaging for detecting early coronary artery disease. He also helped pioneer the use of AI to infer cardiovascular risk from retinal scans. Such non-invasive, consumer-friendly tools could expand prevention, personalize therapy, and cut heart attacks and strokes across the board, he says. “Everybody also deserves a proactive preventive cardiologist in their phone,” McConnell tells host Russ Altman of the latest approaches to heart disease on this episode of Stanford Engineering’s The Future of Everything podcast.
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Chapters:
(00:00:00) Introduction
Russ Altman introduces guest Michael McConnell, a professor of cardiology at Stanford University.
(00:03:02) Reframing Heart Disease
Why coronary disease should be approached the same as cancer.
(00:05:46) Core Risk Factors
The key drivers of cardiovascular disease, and life’s essential eight.
(00:07:18) Coronary Artery Calcium Scoring
How low-dose CT scanning detects disease before symptoms develop.
(00:08:57) The Limits of Stress Testing
Why traditional stress tests often miss early coronary disease.
(00:10:18) AI in Cardiac Imaging
Using AI to identify hidden risks in routine chest scans.
(00:11:30) Retinal Imaging
How AI analysis of retinal blood vessels can predict heart disease risk.
(00:14:55) Detecting Risk Before Symptoms
Why retinal and vascular changes occur long before clinical signs appear.
(00:15:58) Staging Coronary Disease
Using calcium scores to stage coronary disease and personalize treatment.
(00:19:36) Direct-to-Consumer Prevention
The rise of mobile health records, wearable devices, and AI tools.
(00:22:23) Opportunities & System Challenges
Balancing accessibility, guideline-based care, and healthcare system capacity.
(00:25:26) AI-Powered Health Record Analysis
The potential of automated reviews to identify silent risk factors.
(00:27:41) Physician Adoption & System Friction
Barriers to integrating early detection tools into clinical practice.
(00:30:12) Advances in Treatment
Overview of current cholesterol therapies and plaque stabilization.
(00:33:31) Future In a Minute
Rapid-fire Q&A: prevention, implementation science, and future hopes.
(00:35:38) Conclusion
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