Jennifer Matthews: When a patient comes into a shock trauma emergency center, time is of the essence. Doctors must act quickly to save a patient's life. It's often called the Golden Hour.Dr. Stuart Mirvis: After a certain amount of blood loss, you can't compensate anymore, and you will begin to die. Your heart will fail, and your respirations will stop.Jennifer Matthews: X-rays can take up to 45 minutes to get results. Now, new imaging technology scans the entire body in less than a minute.Dr. Stuart Mirvis: The actual scan itself is a 13-second process, which is very fast. The development of that image by the computer takes another eight seconds. After that you have an entire radiograph of the patient's body.Jennifer Matthews: The scan's head-to-toe imaging allows doctors to detect injuries that are not immediately apparent.Dr. Stuart Mirvis: The big plus is going to be not missing injuries that we may miss now and getting the information as quickly as possible.Jennifer Matthews: As the C-shaped arm passes over a patient during the initial scan doctors can zoom in on smaller areas for a closer look.Dr. Stuart Mirvis: The scapular fracture is a little more subtle, so we might want to see that a little bit better, and again, we can adjust the windows and levels to see it a little bit better.Jennifer Matthews: Besides faster and clearer images the machine also exposes patients to 75% less radiation than a conventional X-ray.This is Jennifer Matthews reporting.