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...city. At one point, rescuer Randy White says, "Someone yelled out to me, 'If you don't get us out by 12 o'clock, we're going to start shooting all the rescuers.'" One man was standing on Canal Boulevard with water up to his chest wearing a mink coat that he had liberated from a store. "This natural disaster is beginning to look like a Watts riot," said a worried congressional aide in Washington as he watched the chaos. "There's something really ugly going on here, something wrong at a deeper level...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Aftermath | 9/4/2005 | See Source »

Mike Fackelmann had no reason to think he had heart disease. Although his cholesterol was a touch on the high side, he had never experienced any chest pains and had just passed a stress test with flying colors. So last November, when a cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation Hospital asked the then 49-year-old registered nurse to help demonstrate an experimental new cardiac scanner, neither the physician nor Fackelmann expected to see anything out of the ordinary. The idea was simply to slide Fackelmann through the machine and show what finely detailed images of the heart it could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How New Heart-Scanning Technology Could Save Your Life | 8/28/2005 | See Source »

...most dramatic benefits of the heart-imaging revolution will probably show up first in emergency rooms. About 5.5 million people go to the hospital each year complaining of chest pain. Most of them are not suffering a heart attack, but it can be very tricky to separate out which ones have indigestion or a strained muscle from those who have something much, much more dangerous. A noninvasive test that shows whether or not the cardiac blood vessels are blocked could help make the diagnosis a lot easier. "We used to say to patients who came in with chest pain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How New Heart-Scanning Technology Could Save Your Life | 8/28/2005 | See Source »

Some doctors in emergency rooms are already starting to count on cardiac CT for what they call a "triple rule-out." Here's a typical situation: a middle-age woman walks in complaining of chest pains but otherwise seems fine. The biggest concerns are that she might be having a heart attack, that her aorta may have developed a tear or that she has a major clot in the blood vessels of the lungs. Any of these could swiftly be deadly. Her electrocardiogram comes back normal, and blood tests indicate no cardiac damage. With no compelling reason to suspect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How New Heart-Scanning Technology Could Save Your Life | 8/28/2005 | See Source »

STEVE CARELL plays a chaste, action-figure-collecting neat freak in The 40 Year-Old Virgin. Sacrificing his chest hair for one scene, the ex-Daily Show staff member is cinema's new darling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Odd Men In | 8/21/2005 | See Source »

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