The Year in Medicine 2008

I to R

Mel Evans / AP

Inflammation: Putting Out The Fire in the Heart

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If you've struggled to lower your cholesterol levels to some presumed "safe" zone, you might have wondered how much good all that work did when you learned that half of all heart attacks occur in people with normal cholesterol. The good news is, researchers have fingered a culprit: inflammation, which may be as important as cholesterol in causing heart disease. The better news is that a test for something called C-reactive protein (crp) can tell you your risk. If it's high, the same statins that help control cholesterol can lower crp as well. In one study, people with high crp who took a particular statin had 54% fewer heart attacks than those given a placebo.

View the full list for "The Year in Medicine 2008"

Introduction

America's Health Checkup

It's hard enough to make it to your own annual physical. In this issue, TIME takes the entire nation to the doctor

Obama and Health Care

Reform's Moment May Be Now

Although it's no slam dunk, the President-elect's health-care plan has a fair shot at success

Graphic

5 Truths About Health Care in America

Forget about what you thought you knew about America's health care. These five facts may surprise you