Summary
While you're back on the golf course, or at work, or sound asleep in bed, they can cut your heart in half on a computer screen and examine it from the inside-out, sift through your brain layer by layer, or do a "fly-through" of your colon looking for polyps. Had the blockage not been caught by the St. Luke technicians and Fuchs had suffered a heart attack, Hull told the St. Luke Community Healthcare Network newsletter, there is a 50 percent to 60 percent chance the heart attack would have been fatal, "and a 100 percent chance he would have experienced a significantly diminished lifestyle due to loss of heart muscle."
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Extract
Instant Imaging
RONAN - The 64-slice computerized tomography (CT) scanner at St. Luke Hospital started saving lives before a doctor ever put a patient through it.
The radiology staff at St. Luke's went through extensive training in California to learn how to use the technology made possible by the ...See the full content of this document
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