
Welcome to ClearCardio's Power of Prevention podcast, where we get real about your health, your future, and the steps you can take to live a longer, healthier life. In this eye-opening episode, we tackle one of the biggest killers of our time: heart attacks and strokes. These aren't random events — they're preventable killers that don't care if you're busy building your career, and half of all victims have no symptoms before the attack.
Dr. John Osborne reveals why traditional testing methods like EKGs, stress tests, and cholesterol panels are failing to detect the real threat hiding in your arteries. He explains the revolutionary difference between "risk factors" and actual disease, and why current medical practices miss 25–40% of serious blockages. This episode breaks down how plaque builds up in vessel walls (not where doctors typically look) and why someone can pass a stress test one week and have a heart attack the next.
"The only way to see if you have plaque in the blood vessels — and here's the shocker — is to look to see if you have plaque in your blood vessels. Seems pretty simple." — Dr. John Osborne
Key takeaways
- Heart attacks and strokes are the same disease process — ischemia — affecting different organs: plaque causes 80% of strokes and 99% of heart attacks
- Half of all heart attack victims have no symptoms beforehand; the first symptom is often the attack itself, and 50% of those people die
- EKGs only detect electrical problems — you can have severe blockages and a completely normal EKG
- Stress tests miss 25–40% of significant blockages: they flag vessels 70%+ blocked, but most heart attacks occur from 30–50% blockages
- Plaque doesn't grow inside the artery channel — it grows outward in the vessel wall, invisible to traditional testing
- Risk calculators describe populations similar to you — not YOU: you can have low calculated risk and still have significant disease
- Plaque evolves predictably from "red hot lava" (most dangerous) to calcified "extinct volcano" — and only the final stage shows on a calcium score
- High blood pressure turns "Teflon" vessels into "Velcro" vessels, letting cholesterol stick and start plaque formation
Don't wait for symptoms. Look under the hood.