Wellness B’zaar Hosts ‘FLOW – The Longevity Dialogue,’ Spotlighting Vascular Health as the Core of Healthy Ageing
A thought-leadership gathering at Quorum Club, Hyderabad, brought together leading medical experts to explore circulation, prevention, and the future of longevity.
Wellness B’zaar, in collaboration with RIVEA Vascular Institute, hosted “FLOW – The Longevity Dialogue,” a thought leadership gathering exploring blood flow and vascular health as critical foundations of longevity. Held on February 7, 2026, at Quorum Club, Hyderabad, the event brought together doctors and preventive health advocates for an interdisciplinary conversation on how circulation shapes long-term health outcomes.
Designed as an intimate fireside and panel-led exchange, FLOW challenged the conventional symptom-led view of ageing. The discussion reframed longevity through the lens of circulation – highlighting its influence on brain function, organ vitality, mobility, metabolic health, and overall quality of life long before disease manifests.
A key highlight of the evening was a fireside dialogue moderated by Puja Khan, Co-Founder of Wellness B’zaar, with Dr Arjun Reddy, Founder of RIVEA Vascular Institute, focusing on why vascular health is often overlooked and the importance of early intervention.
“Vascular changes begin long before symptoms appear, often affecting multiple organs silently. Early, image-guided screening allows us to identify risks sooner and intervene before damage becomes irreversible,” said Dr Arjun Reddy.
Moderated by Kavitha Mantha, the panel expanded the conversation across metabolic, cardiac, and regenerative health, positioning circulation as a unifying foundation for preventive longevity.
“Many conditions – from cardiac disease and diabetic complications to fibroids and prostate enlargement – have a vascular dimension. A vascular-first, image-guided approach can prevent complications and significantly reduce the need for surgery,” said Dr Arjun Reddy.
“Metabolic stress and vascular (poor blood flow) dysfunction often show up as early biomarkers well before clinical symptoms. Precision medicine enables us to track these signals and shift care from reactive treatment to preventive longevity,” said Dr Samatha Tulla, Co-Founder, PMX Health.
“Emerging research around peptides and regenerative therapies is opening new possibilities in vascular repair, endothelial health, and recovery-focused interventions,” said Dr Harikiran Chekuri, Founder, Redefine Hair.
“Circulation is the foundation of long-term cardiac health. Many heart conditions are preceded by years of silent vascular dysfunction, which is why early screening, lifestyle interventions, and preventive care are critical to reducing future cardiac risks,” added Dr Rahul Kongara, cardiologist and preventive heart health specialist.
The session concluded with a shared emphasis on proactive care and early awareness.
“Longevity begins long before disease. Protecting vascular health through early screening, lifestyle interventions, and interdisciplinary care can redefine how individuals age and sustain long-term wellbeing,” noted the organisers.
The dialogue reinforced the need for awareness-driven prevention and innovation-led care models that make longevity proactive rather than reactive.
Comments are closed.