Heart Disease Can Be Silent for Years – The Hidden Plaque and Inflammation Driving Cardiovascular Risk with Dr. Christian Jenski | Heart Disease | E141
Heart Disease Can Be Silent for Years – The Hidden Plaque and Inflammation Driving Cardiovascular Risk with Dr. Christian Jenski | Heart Disease | E141  
Podcast: Made for Health | Medical Gaslighting | Lyme | Chronic Infections | Metabolic Syndrome | Insulin Resistance | Mystery Illness
Published On: Mon May 04 2026
Description: 🔥 Feeling “fine”… but wondering if something could be developing quietly beneath the surface? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper, root-cause approach to prevention and long-term health.What if heart disease often develops silently… long before any symptoms ever appear?In this minisode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman and Dr. Christian Jenski continue their vascular series by exploring how heart disease can progress quietly, without obvious warning signs.They break down how plaque forms inside blood vessels, how inflammation and oxidative stress drive that process, and why many people may have underlying disease despite normal cholesterol levels or standard testing. The conversation also highlights the concept of “silent heart attacks” and why symptoms are not always the first signal that something is wrong.This episode encourages a more proactive and informed approach to cardiovascular health, emphasizing the importance of early detection, deeper testing, and foundational lifestyle habits. Key Topics CoveredWhat silent heart attacks are and why they often go unnoticedHow plaque forms inside blood vessels over timeThe difference between soft plaque and calcified plaqueWhy inflammation, oxidative stress, and immune dysfunction drive vascular diseaseHow heart disease can develop even with normal cholesterol levelsThe limitations of standard cholesterol panels and stress testingWhy many people fall into a “middle ground” of undetected riskThe role of advanced testing in identifying early vascular changesHow environmental factors like toxins and metals may contribute to riskWhy prevention and early intervention matter more than waiting for symptomsFollow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD