The Surrey Cardiovascular Clinic Podcast

PODCAST · health

The Surrey Cardiovascular Clinic Podcast

The Surrey Cardiovascular Clinic Podcast features AI-generated discussions based on clinical articles published by The Surrey Cardiovascular Clinic (SCVC).Each episode explores contemporary issues in cardiology and cardiometabolic health, translating detailed blog content into an accessible audio format. Topics include cardiovascular risk, metabolic health, prevention strategies and structured clinical escalation.The series is authored by Dr Edward Leatham, Consultant Cardiologist, and is intended for GPs, junior doctors and patients. It may also be of interest to healthcare professionals and others involved in the wider cardiovascular health sector.

  1. 12

    https://www.scvc.co.uk/cardiovascular-prevention/cardiologist-body-recomposition/

    Body recomposition focuses on reducing visceral fat while preserving muscle mass, offering superior cardiovascular protection compared to traditional weight loss. This approach proves particularly valuable for patients with coronary disease, those starting GLP-1 therapy, and adults over 60 facing age-related muscle loss. https://www.scvc.co.uk/cardiovascular-prevention/cardiologist-body-recomposition/

  2. 11

    TOE Before Cardioversion: Why Cardiologists Check for Hidden Clots

    Transoesophageal echocardiography before atrial fibrillation cardioversion prevents stroke by detecting hidden left atrial appendage clots. The greatest risk comes from atrial stunning after rhythm restoration, not existing thrombus. TOE enables safe early intervention.Read blog

  3. 10

    A Single Episode of Atrial Fibrillation with a CHA₂DS₂-VASc Score ≥2: Do You Need Anticoagulants for Life?

    A single episode of atrial fibrillation in patients with a CHA₂DS₂-VASc score ≥2 often leads to a recommendation for lifelong anticoagulation. But is this always necessary? This article explores when exceptions may be reasonable, the importance of rhythm monitoring, and how shared decision-making can guide personalised, safe stroke prevention strategies.Read blog 

  4. 9

    Atrial Fibrillation or Flutter with a Low CHA₂DS₂-VASc Score: Why Cardioversion Still Carries Stroke Risk

    Patients with a low CHA₂DS₂-VASc score are often considered low risk for stroke. However, around cardioversion, this changes. Atrial paresis following restoration of sinus rhythm creates a temporary high-risk period for clot formation, particularly after AF lasting more than 24 hours, making short-term anticoagulation essential even in younger patients.Read blog

  5. 8

    LDL Cholesterol Reduction: Absolute Beats Relative? It’s “And,” Not “Or”

    Modern lipid management requires both substantial percentage LDL reduction and achieving low absolute LDL levels. Relative reduction reflects treatment intensity, while absolute LDL determines residual risk. Trials consistently show “lower is better.” Even with good percentage drops, patients may remain undertreated—making combined pharmacological and lifestyle strategies essential to reduce atherogenic exposure and cardiovascular risk.Read blogCardiology for medics podcast series

  6. 7

    Targets for LDL-C, ApoB and Small Dense LDL

    LDL-C alone may miss important cardiovascular risk. This article explains why ApoB and small dense LDL often better reflect atherosclerotic burden, especially in metabolic disease and high visceral fat. It outlines practical lipid targets by risk category and shows how LDL-C:ApoB ratios can estimate dangerous particle patternsRead blog Cardiology for medics podcast series

  7. 6

    The Role of Gain of Function Mutations in Heart Disease

    Gain-of-function mutations in PCSK9 increase LDL cholesterol by accelerating LDL receptor degradation, helping explain inherited cardiovascular risk. Unlike evolutionary adaptations such as sickle-cell heterozygote advantage, these mutations directly enhance protein activity. Understanding this genetic pathway has transformed cholesterol science and led to powerful new treatments for coronary artery disease.BlogCardiology for medics podcast series

  8. 5

    Cardiometabolic Risk in 2026: From Self-Management to Structured Escalation

    Cardiometabolic risk develops gradually through visceral fat accumulation, insulin resistance and rising blood pressure. A structured escalation model — from supported self-management to specialist review and selective GLP-1 therapy — allows proportionate intervention before overt cardiovascular disease emerges. Early, coordinated action can alter long-term risk trajectories.Read blogFor more in this podcast series see https://feeds.transistor.fm/cardiology-topics-for-medics

  9. 4

    THE CHOICE: How Cardiologists Operate GLP-1 Mimetics in Practice

    Semaglutide’s cardiovascular benefits extend beyond weight loss — it powerfully reduces visceral adipose tissue (VAT), the internal fat that drives inflammation, insulin resistance and small dense LDL. At SCVC, our GLP-1 programme targets VAT directly using personalised VAT scans and flexible dosing to improve long-term heart health.For full article see blog

  10. 3

    The 8-Month Metabolic Reset: A New Approach to Reversing Visceral Fat, Improving Blood Pressure and Blood Glucose

    As we age — particularly if we have inherited genes that predispose us to metabolic disarray that accompanies modern diet and lifestyles, we start to gain weight as visceral fat increases, and muscle mass declines. This double effect worsens blood pressure, cholesterol triglycerides, and blood sugar — contributing to what is known as the metabolic syndrome. Fat cells that have reached their capacity to store extra energy as a healthy reserve start to cause havoc by releasing free fatty acids and in turn worsens insulin resistance, that steepens the decline in health.However in many cases if we can reduce visceral fat, rebuild muscle, and reach a caloric deficit, we can reverse many of these effects.See blog

  11. 2

    Some hypothyroid patients with heart disease are prescribed T4 that doesn't convert to T3

    Hypothyroidism is a very common medical condition. Most patients symptoms improve with standard thyroxine treatment, however some do not. There are some genetic variations that leads to poor conversion of T4 to T3 (the active thyroid hormone).  It is not always possible to tell from TSH and T4 chemistry that this issue is present. This podcast covers a review article published in the Lancet in 2023. If you have an underactive thyroid and are taking thyroxine but have hypothyroid symptoms despite apparently 'normal' TSH and T4, especially if you struggle to lose weight and have raised blood cholesterol then it is possible that your T4 to T3 conversion is impaired and T3 supplements may make you feel a lot better. The relevance of T3 in the management of hypothyroidism

  12. 1

    BP Targets: a personalised approach

    This podcast is a discussion around  Guidance Document for GPs on Blood Pressure Management: Timeline of Events - where significant events and research in the evolution of blood pressure management guidelines, focusing particularly on heart failure. It aims to aid General Practitioners (GPs) in the UK in understanding the historical context and current standards for managing blood pressure across various patient demographics.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Surrey Cardiovascular Clinic Podcast features AI-generated discussions based on clinical articles published by The Surrey Cardiovascular Clinic (SCVC).Each episode explores contemporary issues in cardiology and cardiometabolic health, translating detailed blog content into an accessible audio format. Topics include cardiovascular risk, metabolic health, prevention strategies and structured clinical escalation.The series is authored by Dr Edward Leatham, Consultant Cardiologist, and is intended for GPs, junior doctors and patients. It may also be of interest to healthcare professionals and others involved in the wider cardiovascular health sector.

HOSTED BY

D E Leatham

Produced by Dr E Leatham

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