Detect Hidden Heart Risks

Discover how your body sustains effort with science-backed endurance testing to train smarter and recover faster.

Detect Hidden Heart Risks

Discover how your body sustains effort with science-backed endurance testing to train smarter and recover faster.

Detect Hidden Heart Risks

Discover how your body sustains effort with science-backed endurance testing to train smarter and recover faster.

What is CT Calcium?

What is CT Calcium?

A specialized heart scan that measures calcium deposits in the coronary arteries using computed tomography. These calcium deposits indicate plaque buildup, which can narrow arteries and increase the risk of heart attack. The result is given as a calcium score.


A higher score means greater risk of coronary artery disease, while a score of zero indicates very low risk. This scan is quick, non-invasive, and a gold-standard tool for detecting early heart disease before symptoms appear.

a gloved hand holding a test tube filled with liquid
a gloved hand holding a test tube filled with liquid
a gloved hand holding a test tube filled with liquid
a gloved hand holding a test tube filled with liquid

What Your Calcium Score Reveals?

What Your Calcium Score Reveals?

It focuses on key heart health markers. The Calcium Score shows how much plaque is in your arteries, while plaque burden reflects overall buildup.


A percentile rank compares your score to peers, and artery-specific scoring pinpoints where blockages may develop.

a gloved hand holding a test tube filled with liquid
a gloved hand holding a test tube filled with liquid

Learn more

Frequently

asked questions

Frequently

asked questions

What is a CT Calcium Score?

What is a CT Calcium Score?

Why is calcium scoring important if I feel healthy?

Why is calcium scoring important if I feel healthy?

Who should consider this scan?

Who should consider this scan?

Does a high calcium score mean a heart attack is imminent?

Does a high calcium score mean a heart attack is imminent?

How often should RMR be tested?

How often should RMR be tested?