Live-Attendee Giveaway!
Join us live for a chance to win a complimentary ProdromeScan with a personal interpretation by Dr. Dayan Goodenowe! One lucky winner will be notified by email. For research and educational purposes only. Not for diagnostic use. (US RESIDENTS ONLY)
Join Dr. Dayan Goodenowe for a comprehensive discussion about the true underlying mechanisms of heart health: how cardiovascular function is maintained or lost, and what emerging science reveals about restoring and maintaining cardiovascular structure and function late into life.
Heart disease is the leading cause of death worldwide. However, most people don’t understand what heart health actually means.
A healthy heart isn’t just about cholesterol numbers and blood pressure readings.
Understanding heart health requires understanding how the heart is actually supposed to function. What biochemical systems are actually responsible for cardiac output and rhythm, and which mechanisms are responsible for maintaining cardiovascular structure and repair.
It is one of the most misunderstood aspects of health that we face.
More than 6 million Americans are living with heart disease today. Cardiovascular disease remains the number one cause of death in the United States.
But here’s what most people don’t understand: heart disease isn’t something you “catch.” It’s a progressive decline in cardiovascular function driven by specific biochemical changes in metabolism, inflammation, and cellular communication.
Heart function is a measurable capability. It’s a capability that can be lost.
And understanding how you lose cardiovascular function, and what the biochemical systems are that restore and maintain heart health late into life, is something everybody needs to know.
Heart function is a measurable capability. It’s a capability that can be lost.
And understanding how you lose cardiovascular function, and what the biochemical systems are that restore and maintain heart health late into life, is something everybody needs to know.
JANUARY 7th, 4PM PACIFIC
Through advanced biochemical research and metabolic analysis, scientists have identified the specific mechanisms that drive cardiovascular decline:
The challenge is that conventional approaches focus on managing symptoms rather than addressing the underlying biochemical factors that allow cardiovascular decline to develop.
Why do some people maintain strong cardiovascular function well into their 80s and 90s, while others experience heart failure in their 60s?
Because we’re not addressing the root biochemical causes: the metabolic disruptions and cellular stress that create conditions favorable for either cardiovascular resilience or deterioration.
Most people think heart disease is something you inherit or is an inevitable part of aging.
But the reality is far more complex and, crucially: far more hopeful.
There are measurable systems that determine heart health:
The structural component – cardiac muscle, valves, and conduction pathways
The functional component – output, rhythm, and repair mechanisms
Research shows that cardiovascular function depends on specific biochemical systems: energy metabolism, membrane integrity, inflammatory balance, and cellular repair mechanisms.
When these systems break down, heart function declines. When they’re supported, the heart can maintain, and even restore, remarkable capabilities.
More importantly, technology of today can allow us to restore cardiovascular structure and function such that heart health can be maintained into very late years of life.
Research shows that cardiovascular function depends on specific biochemical systems: energy metabolism, membrane integrity, inflammatory balance, and cellular repair mechanisms.
When these systems break down, heart function declines. When they’re supported, the heart can maintain, and even restore, remarkable capabilities.
More importantly, technology of today can allow us to restore cardiovascular structure and function such that heart health can be maintained into very late years of life.
Dr. Goodenowe presents the latest research on heart health that will challenge conventional understanding and provide cutting-edge scientific insights into cardiovascular function, metabolic health, and cardiac resilience.
JANUARY 7th AT 4 PM PACIFIC
World-Renowned Neuroscientist & Bestselling Author
Dr. Dayan Goodenowe is a world-renowned neuroscientist whose research into the biochemical mechanisms of disease started in 1990. His curiosity about the biochemistry of life remains as insatiable today as it was over three decades ago.
Dr. Goodenowe invented and developed advanced diagnostic and bioinformatic technologies, designed and manufactured novel biochemical precursors, and identified biochemical prodromes of numerous diseases including cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, stroke, autism, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, and multiple types of cancer.
As the founder of Prodrome Sciences and author of the bestselling book “Breaking Alzheimer’s,” Dr. Goodenowe’s research focuses on identifying and correcting the biochemical imbalances that affect cellular function—long before disease becomes irreversible.
His current focus is to defeat the entropy of aging by creating strategic biochemical and biofunctional reserve capacity in advance of known disease risks, enabling the human body to maintain optimal physical and biological functions.
As the founder of Prodrome Science and author of the bestselling book "Breaking Alzheimer's," Dr. Goodenowe's research focuses on identifying and correcting the biochemical imbalances that affect brain function—long before symptoms become irreversible.
His current focus is to defeat the entropy of aging by creating strategic biochemical and biofunctional reserve capacity in advance of known disease risks, enabling the human body to maintain optimal physical and biological functions.
This presentation offers evidence-based, scientifically-grounded understanding of cardiovascular health that explores the biochemical foundations of heart function, cardiac resilience, and long-term vitality.
Live-Attendee Giveaway!
Join us live for a chance to win a complimentary ProdromeScan with a personal interpretation by Dr. Dayan Goodenowe! One lucky winner will be notified by email. For research and educational purposes only. Not for diagnostic use. (US RESIDENTS ONLY)
Whether you’re concerned about your own cardiovascular health, caring for someone with heart disease, or want to understand this topic at a deeper level, this presentation provides direct scientific insights backed by decades of biochemical research.
Dr. Goodenowe will break down the details of heart health in a way that everyone can understand, and show you technology and ways in which we can restore cardiovascular structure and heart function.
If you or a loved one is starting to experience early signs of cardiovascular decline, then you’re going to want to listen to how you can restore that function and return to optimal heart health.
JANUARY 7th, 4PM PACIFIC
"Dr. Goodenowe's research has completely changed how we understand disease at the biochemical level. His scientific approach provides hope grounded in real science, not speculation."
"Finally, someone who explains the mechanisms behind disease in a way that makes sense and empowers us to think differently about health."
"I am an Apollo Health Coach with a background in Bio/chem, and when I listened to Dr. Goodenowe's research, I was fascinated, intrigued and blown away. My heart beats for science, and his work has started to 'hang together' in ways that make real sense"
"Dr. Goodenowe's approach to biochemistry is revolutionary. He doesn't just talk about treating disease—he addresses the underlying mechanisms that can make a real difference in cellular health."
Join hundreds discovering new pathways for understanding heart health at the most fundamental level: the biochemical mechanisms that govern every heartbeat.
JANUARY 7th AT 4 PM PACIFIC
This event is presented by Perpetual Health in partnership with Prodrome Sciences. Dr. Goodenowe’s research-based insights are grounded in peer-reviewed science and decades of biochemical research.