12/11/2025
🧠 Re-thinking Heart Health: From “Blocked Arteries” to Inflammation, Atheroma & Lifestyle 🫀
Hello friends — I want to share something deeply relevant to the work I do, helping clients optimise their health through anti-inflammatory nutrition, lifestyle upgrades, movement and proactive habits. A new major scientific report from the medical journal The Lancet has just reframed how we think about coronary heart disease — and this has powerful implications for how we coach health, prevent issues early, and shift from reaction to prevention.
🔍 What the report says
The commission authors argue that the conventional view of coronary artery disease (CAD) — focused on diagnosing ischaemia (i.e., reduced blood flow because of major blockages) and treating it when symptomatic — is too late. Instead, they define a concept of atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (ACAD): the process of plaque build-up, inflammation of the vessel wall, remodelling, immune activation, lipid accumulation — quite a long time before the big event that we traditionally fear (heart attack, chest pain).
They point out that by the time you detect ischaemia or a major obstruction, a lot of the damage has already been done. The earlier window — when inflammation is still modifiable — is where lifestyle, nutrition, movement, mindset all have their role.
Importantly: the report highlights that eliminating known behavioural and metabolic risk factors (smoking, hypertension, high LDL, poor diet, lack of movement) could reduce the global deaths from ACAD by ~82% by 2050, potentially saving ~8.7 million lives per year.
🌿 Why this matters for anti-inflammatory nutrition & lifestyle coaching
If we accept that the disease process is fundamentally about inflammation, lipid deposition, endothelial injury, immune-vascular interplay, then the role of nutrition and lifestyle leaps into the foreground. Here are some of the take-aways that directly speak to the kind of coaching & support I deliver:
1. Diet matters big time
The report emphasises that dietary risks (ultra-processed foods, high sugar, high sodium, trans fats) are major contributors to ACAD.
Conversely, dietary interventions emphasising nuts, legumes, wholegrains, seafood, low red/processed meat, low sugar-sweetened beverages represent strong preventive potential.
For you and me: adopting an anti-inflammatory, nutrient-rich diet (rich in whole foods, colourful vegetables, fibre, good fats, low processed, limited sugar) is part of shifting the process upstream — before the “blockage” shows up.
2. Lifestyle beyond diet
Movement, physical activity, addressing obesity/overweight, good sleep, managing stress, limiting smoking/tobacco are all flagged.
The report emphasises that early in life (including childhood, prenatal, adolescence) is crucial — meaning the habits you build today can pay lifelong dividends.
For clients: building consistent movement habits, improving sleep, adopting stress-resilience strategies, avoiding chronic low-grade inflammation (from poor lifestyle, diet, environment) becomes central.
3. Focus on inflammation & vessel health, not just ‘clogged arteries’
The report describes how immune cells (leukocytes), inflammatory processes, smooth muscle migration, endothelial dysfunction all contribute to the plaque build-up in the vessel wall — before you get symptoms of ischaemia.
This means part of our coaching frame becomes: “How do we keep your vessel walls calm, flexible, with minimal inflammatory insult?” rather than waiting until “something shows up” and you’re managing downstream damage.
4. Early detection + action = advantage
The report emphasises screening, risk-factor modification, earlier detection of atherosclerosis (even before symptoms) is key.
As a health coach, I help clients understand risk factors, track their markers (lipids, BP, inflammation, lifestyle metrics) and implement changes early — essentially translating this “shift upstream” philosophy into action.
🏁 My Invitation to You
If you’re reading this and thinking “yes — I know parts of this, but I haven’t really taken the upstream route” — that’s totally fine, you’re not late. But the opportunity is here.
Over the coming weeks, I’ll be sharing specific tips and frameworks for:
Anti-inflammatory plate building: how to design meals that reduce vascular inflammation, support lipid health, support endothelial function
Movement & lifestyle rhythms that support vessel health (not just cardio for calories)
Stress, sleep & recovery strategies that lower chronic inflammatory burden
Monitoring key markers (nutrition, lifestyle, vascular health) so you can be proactive rather than reactive
If this resonates and you’d like more personalised support (whether you’re health coaching, trying to upgrade your lifestyle, or simply want to age better and reduce cardiovascular risk), I’d love to explore how we can work together.
✅ Final takeaway
Heart disease is not only about “will I get a blockage” or “will I have a heart attack”. A powerful new paradigm (from The Lancet) suggests we should be looking a lot earlier — at the atheroma, the inflammation, the vessel wall changes, the lifestyle drivers — and that’s where much of the modifiable risk lives.
So yes — diet, movement, sleep, stress, environment, habits — they matter. Big time. And they’re where you have the most agency.
If you found this useful, feel free to like/share/comment below and let me know: What’s one habit you’re ready to shift to take advantage of this early-window perspective?
Here’s to building resilient, healthy vessels and thriving lives ❤️