CASE STUDY

The Woman Who Was Told to Come Back When She Felt Worse

56-Year-Old Female · Hypertension · Hypothyroidism · Abnormal EKG

She saw a cardiologist. She had an abnormal EKG, elevated blood pressure, and years of borderline labs. Her echocardiogram was read as normal. She was told to come back ‘as needed.’ She came to Pulse Perfect for a second opinion. What the evaluation revealed illustrated one of the most persistent problems in cardiology: the systematic under-screening of women. 

Female patients are statistically under-screened and under-treated in cardiovascular medicine. ‘Normal echo’ is not the same as ‘no cardiovascular disease.’

What Did Traditional Medicine Say?

Traditional Cardiology 

  • Echocardiogram: normal → 'come back as needed'
  • Abnormal EKG noted but not further investigated
  • Borderline LDL (122) and HbA1c (6.1%) → lifestyle advice only
  • Lp(a) never tested
  • Body composition and fitness capacity never assessed
  • No further imaging ordered — follow up 'as needed'

Pulse Perfect Approach

  • Echo revealed concentric LV hypertrophy, diastolic dysfunction, and left atrial dilation
  • Stress test was nondiagnostic (baseline EKG abnormalities) → correctly prompted coronary CTA
  • Coronary CTA: early LAD plaque confirmed → ASCVD diagnosis → statin + GLP-1 initiated
  • Lp(a) = 88.3 nmol/L — a major independent genetic risk factor, never captured on standard panels
  • VO₂ max: 26.1 mL/kg/min (bottom 10–25th percentile) — a major mortality predictor requiring immediate attention
Pulse Perfect Findings

Coronary CTA with  HeartFlow Analysis 

Parameter Result Significance
CAC Score 0 No calcified plaque — but non-calcified plaque present
Total Plaque Volume 8.4 mm³ (0.4% PAV) Early disease — predominantly non-calcified (modifiable)
Non-Calcified Plaque 7.6 mm³ in proximal LAD Active plaque — confirms ASCVD diagnosis
Low-Density Plaque 0 mm³ No vulnerable plaque — disease is in modifiable phase
Greatest Stenosis pLAD 6% (minimal) Early — opportunity window for regression
CAD-RADS 1/P1 Minimal stenosis — but ASCVD now confirmed
Pulse Perfect Findings

Advanced Lipid

Marker Result Goal Status
LDL Particle Number (LDL-P) 1,443 nmol/L < 1,000 High — active atherogenic drive
Small LDL-P 641 nmol/L < 527 Significantly elevated
LP-IR Score 76 < 45 Insulin resistant — significant
ApoB 99 mg/dL < 60 mg/dL (ASCVD goal) Needs aggressive reduction
Lp(a) 88.3 nmol/L < 75 nmol/L Elevated — independent genetic risk
hs-CRP 1.44 mg/L < 1.0 mg/L Elevated — active inflammation
Pulse Perfect Findings

VO₂ Max, Body Composition & Epigenetics

Metric Value Comment
VO₂ Max 26.1 mL/kg/min 10–25th percentile — strongly associated with elevated all-cause mortality
Body Fat % 44% Significantly elevated — chronic inflammatory and insulin-resistant state
Visceral Adipose Tissue 2.75 lbs / 80.7 in³ Significantly elevated — accelerates plaque formation
OMICm Age (Biologic) 48.1 yrs 8.3 years YOUNGER than chronological age — excellent cellular resilience
Fit Age 60.3 yrs 3.9 years OLDER — specific, correctable fitness gap
Hormone System Age 63.5 yrs Endocrine acceleration — linked to insulin resistance
Pulse Perfect Findings

Treatment Initiated

High-intensity statin therapy was initiated targeting ApoB < 60 mg/dL and LDL < 55 mg/dL.
A GLP-1 receptor agonist was prescribed based on SELECT trial evidence demonstrating a 20% reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events in patients with established ASCVD and obesity. This is evidence-based cardiovascular medicine, not simply a weight loss intervention.

Blood pressure was optimized. The Pulse Perfect 360 Blueprint delivered a personalized VO₂ max improvement protocol, zone training prescription, Green Mediterranean nutrition framework, and a 90-day phased action plan.

Outcomes: Blood pressure optimized. Cholesterol improved. VO₂ max improved with the blueprint training protocol.

Pulse Perfect Findings

Key Clinical Teaching Point

What this case teaches us

  • Female patients are systematically under-screened and under-treated in cardiovascular medicine. This patient had a 'normal echo' and was dismissed despite an abnormal EKG, elevated Lp(a), insulin resistance, 44% body fat, and early LAD plaque.
  • A CAC score of zero does not mean no disease. This patient had a calcium score of zero and early non-calcified LAD plaque — confirming ASCVD and fundamentally changing her treatment targets.
  • Lp(a) of 88.3 nmol/L is a largely genetic, independent cardiovascular risk factor present in approximately 20% of the population. It is never captured on a standard lipid panel and requires specific testing.
  • VO₂ max of 26.1 mL/kg/min is in the lowest quartile for age and is strongly associated with increased all-cause mortality — more predictive than blood pressure, cholesterol, or diabetes status alone.
  • GLP-1 receptor agonists (e.g., semaglutide) have demonstrated cardiovascular mortality reduction in patients with ASCVD and obesity — prescribing this medication in this context is evidence-based cardiology, not weight loss medicine.
  • The epigenetic data revealed a striking contradiction: OMICm age 8 years younger than chronological age (excellent cellular resilience) but a fitness age 3.9 years older — a specific, correctable gap in physical conditioning.

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