Why healthy people still have heart attacks
Why healthy people still have heart attacks — and what advanced imaging reveals first
Many first heart attacks happen in people without severely elevated cholesterol levels or prior symptoms. Here’s what their checkups missed, and how a CT scan finds it first.
You exercise. You eat reasonably well. Your last physical came back clean. So why does a 50-year-old runner end up in the ER with chest pain? The short answer: standard checkups weren’t built to see the kind of plaque that causes most heart attacks.
A 15-minute cardiac CT in Midtown shows what blood work can’t.
What standard checkups miss
The traditional heart workup — cholesterol panel, blood pressure, EKG, maybe a stress test — measures risk factors and electrical activity. It doesn’t actually look at your coronary arteries. Cholesterol numbers tell you what’s circulating in your blood; they don’t tell you what’s already built up in the vessel wall. A normal stress test means your arteries aren’t blocked enough yet to limit blood flow — not that they’re clean. Plenty of patients pass these tests and still have significant disease.
What advanced imaging shows
A coronary CT angiogram looks directly at the arteries. It distinguishes between calcified plaque (older, more stable) and soft, non-calcified plaque. Soft plaque is considered more vulnerable to rupture and is commonly associated with acute heart attacks, particularly in younger and middle-aged adults. It doesn’t always raise a calcium score and doesn’t show up on routine labs — which is part of why it’s so often missed. Add Cleerly’s AI plaque analysis and you get a detailed assessment of plaque burden and high-risk plaque features associated with increased cardiovascular risk.
A normal physical means your risk factors look fine. A cardiac CT shows what’s actually in your arteries — and that’s the picture that predicts a heart attack.
Where to start
If you’re over 40, have a family history of heart disease, or simply want a baseline before symptoms ever appear, a cardiac CT is one of the most direct noninvasive ways to evaluate coronary artery plaque and anatomy. At CPAI, scans are flat-fee, performed on an open-ring scanner (no closed tube), and read by board-certified cardiac radiologists within 48 hours. No prior authorization, no referral required for most exams. The point isn’t to add anxiety — it’s to replace guessing with information you can act on.
Stop guessing about your heart.
See what’s actually inside your arteries with a cardiac CT in Midtown Manhattan. Most appointments available within the week — physician coordination handled for you.
Or call (212) 363-7315