Life on a 'Powder Keg': Understanding and Managing Atherosclerosis
Atherosclerosis is one of medicine's great paradoxes: a process so universal that it begins in childhood and touches virtually every human life, yet so unpredictable in its consequences that it can remain silent for decades before triggering a catastrophic event. Understanding this dual nature — inevitable yet manageable, silent yet explosive — is essential for anyone seeking to take control of their cardiovascular health. An Unavoidable Companion The Russian pathologist Ippolit Davydovsky argued compellingly that atherosclerosis is not a disease in the conventional sense but a natural feature of human aging. It begins in childhood, progresses through adolescence and adulthood, and is, to some degree, predetermined. This perspective shifts the question from whether atherosclerosis will develop to how quickly it will progress and how dangerous it will become. For most people, atherosclerosis follows a slow and relatively benign course, accumulating quietly over decades without ever...