The Future You Is a Four-Part Vodcast Series from Menâs Health & Womenâs Health, Produced in Partnership with °”ÍűTV Langone Health
°”ÍűTV Langoneâs Dr. Sunil Rao and Richard Dorment, editorial director of Menâs Health and Womenâs Health, speak with an entertainer and an athlete whose experiences with heart disease are inspiring others.
Credit: °”ÍűTV Langone Staff
Your heart will beat about 100,000 times todayâbut how many of those beats are healthy ones? The truth is, your cardiovascular system isnât just keeping you alive, itâs quietly writing the long-term story of your health. The choices you make todayâhow you eat, move, manage stress, and respond to warning signsâcan help protect your life or cut it short.
Heart disease remains the leading cause of death for both men and womenâevery 40 seconds someone in the United States has a heart attack. Yet many of the conditions that threaten cardiovascular health are preventable or treatable when caught earlyâif you know what to look for and how to advocate for yourself.
This episode of The Future You, a vodcast hosted by Richard Dorment, editorial director of Menâs Health and Womenâs Health at Hearst, explores heart health and how men and women can prevent, track, and manage cardiovascular conditions at every age. °”ÍűTV Langone interventional cardiologist Sunil Rao, MD; Grammy-winning country music star Carly Pearce; and snowboarding legend Shaun White join the conversation to discuss warning signs, the importance of self-advocacy, and living fully with heart conditions.
.
Listen to Your Body and Speak Up
Pearce had always been active and healthy. As a performer, she relied on cardiovascular endurance for her 75- to 90-minute shows. But in 2020, at age 29, she noticed something unusual: a stabbing chest pain and shortness of breath while walking up a hill.
âMy father had a serious heart attack when he was 44, so I immediately went to the worst-case scenario,â she says. Even her parents suggested the cause of her symptoms was likely stress or anxiety. When she visited her doctor, she heard the same thing: youâre young, youâre healthy, youâre fine.
But Pearce knew something was wrong. After being dismissed multiple times by her doctor, she endured a frightening escalation of her symptoms when she collapsed at dinner. âI was doubled over; I couldnât stand straight,â she explains. âI was taking breaths almost like you would through a straw. That was as much as I could manage, because the pain was so severe.â
An emergency room electrocardiogram revealed the diagnosis: pericarditis, an inflammation of the lining around the heart. Over the next few years, the condition returned in flaresâwhat doctors call recurrent pericarditis.
âIf I hadnât advocated for myself, I probably would not have gotten that diagnosis,â Pearce says. âYou know your body better than anybody. If it is telling you something, listen to it.â
Heart Disease Doesnât Discriminate
The fact that Pearce had to collapse before getting a diagnosis reveals a dangerous truth about how heart disease is overlooked, particularly in young, healthy-seeming women. The classic warning signs of heart attack were historically described in men, but women can present differently, with symptoms like unusual fatigue or unexplained nausea rather than crushing chest pain.
âBeing male was taught as a risk factor for coronary artery disease for a long time,â says Dr. Rao. âBut weâre finally becoming aware that itâs just as common in women as it is in men.â
He emphasizes that anyone over age 18 with concerning symptomsâchest pain, unusual shortness of breath, or an inability to do once-easy activitiesâdeserves thorough evaluation. Early diagnosis means access to treatments that can reduce the risk of future heart attack or stroke.
From Heart Condition to Heart-Stopping Feats
Heart health has been part of Whiteâs story from the very beginning. The three-time Olympic gold medalist was born with tetralogy of Fallot, a group of congenital heart defects that cause the heartâs chambers to leak, leading to oxygen loss. He had multiple surgeries as an infant to repair the condition.
Rather than letting his condition limit him, Whiteâs parents let him find his own boundaries. His story took a twist when he discovered snowboarding and skateboardingâextreme sports that require tremendous cardiovascular endurance. âI think my parents felt like theyâd come so close to losing me that they were on bonus time,â White says. âThey said, âWe should just let him live.ââ
Whiteâs story is commonly referenced by cardiologists to bring hope to newly diagnosed families. His message to those discovering heart conditions is one of perspective. âAt first you might think itâs the end of the world, when itâs not,â he says, emphasizing that small, consistent steps toward better health can lead to meaningful improvements over time.
The Power of Heart Disease Prevention
Thereâs an enormous amount we can do to prevent heart problems or catch them earlyâthe mission of °”ÍűTV Langoneâs Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease. Dr. Rao recommends starting annual checkups in your 30s to monitor blood pressure and cholesterol, two key indicators that can be managed before they cause serious problems.
While genetics plays a role, lifestyle factors remain the most powerful defense. âNearly 80 percent of heart disease is preventable,â says Dr. Rao. âWe have proven toolsâbetter blood pressure control, cholesterol-lowering therapies, and new drugs targeting inflammation.â
Beyond screening, the fundamentals of heart disease prevention remain powerful:
- regular physical activity
- eating whole foods with adequate fiber
- controlling weight
- not smoking
- getting seven to eight hours of quality sleep each night
Living with a Heart Condition
Having a heart condition doesnât mean the end of living fully. During a 40-city concert tour, Pearce altered her routine, keeping her heart rate below 110 and finding new ways to perform.
âI donât think about recurrent pericarditis all the time,â she says. âIâve had to make adjustments, but it doesnât completely take over my life.â
Whiteâs message is similar: donât let a diagnosis define your limits. His career in extreme sports proves that with proper care and monitoring, you can still achieve at the highest levels.
Thatâs exactly what modern cardiology aims to support, says Dr. Rao. âOur goal as a medical community is to make it so that you can just go about your life after a diagnosis involving your heart,â he says.
for an informative discussion on protecting your heart and living fully at every age. Some highlights:
- how heart disease symptoms can differ between men and women
- why you should never dismiss warning signs or accept answers that donât feel right
- how lifestyle changes and medical advances are revolutionizing prevention
- what to do if you receive a cardiovascular diagnosis