A、A: Ground-glass opacity
B、B: Fibrosis formation
C、C: “paving stone sign”
D、D: White lung
E、E: The density of both lungs Diffuse increases
A、A: Ground-glass opacity
B、B: Fibrosis formation
C、C: “paving stone sign”
D、D: White lung
E、E: The density of both lungs Diffuse increases
听力原文: Good morning. As part of your orientation to campus life, the Dean's Office has scheduled a short tour of the medical clinic and the infirmary. We, on the nursing staff, hope that none of you get sick.
But just in case you do become ill, we want you to know what procedures to follow. If you have a really bad cold, it's a good idea to have one of us check you over at the clinic. Several students last year didn't see a nurse about their bad colds, and they developed terrible coughs. It's possible to get pneumonia when you neglect the cough. If you do get something as serious as pneumonia, you'll have to come and stay in the infirmary. A doctor visits the infirmary regularly.
On the other hand, if you just have an ordinary cold, you can usually stay in your dormitory room. Many students try to keep up with their usual activities when they don't feel well. As a result, they often get much sicker. I think it's wise to rest more and skip a few classes. If you are 711, you can always get a medical excuse from one of us or from the doctor. The clinic hours are from nine to twelve every week day morning. But there is an emergency number you can call anytime, which you can find in the campus telephone book. Before we start on our tour of the infirmary, do you have any questions?
What is the speaker?
A.A nurse.
B.A doctor.
C.A professor.
D.A student.
Tony Huesman, a heart transplant recipient (接受者) who lived a record 31 years with a single donated organ has died at age 51 of leukemia (白血病), but his heart still going strong. "He had leukemia," his widow Carol Huesman said, "His heart—believe it or not—held out. His heart never gave up until the end, when it had to."
Huesman got a heart transplant in 1978 at Stanford University. That was just 11 years after the world&39;s first heart transplant was performed in South Africa. At his death, Huesman was listed as the world&39;s longest survivor of a single transplanted heart both by Stanford and the Richmond, Virginia-based United Network for Organ Sharing.
"I&39;m a living proof of a person who can go through a life-threatening illness, have the operation and return to a productive life," Huesman told the Dayton Daily News in 2006.
Huesman worked as marketing director at a sporting-goods store. He was found to have serious heart disease while in high school. His heart, attacked by a pneumonia (肺炎) virus, was almost four times its normal size from trying to pump blood with weakened muscles.
Huesman&39;s sister, Linda Huesman Lamb, also was stricken with the same problem and received a heart transplant in 1983. The two were the nation&39;s first brother and sister heart transplant recipients. She died in 1991 at age 29.
Huesman founded the Huesman Heart Foundation in Dayton, which seeks to reduce heart disease by educating children and offers a nursing scholarship in honor of his sister.
Tony Huesman died from ____________.
A.heart failure
B.heart transplant
C.pneumonia
D.non-heart-related disease
A、Suppurative pneumonia
B、Necrotizing bacterial pneumonia
C、Bacteremia
D、Tuberculosis
A.lobular pneumonia
B.granulomatous inflammalion
C.viral myocarditis
D.lobar pneumonia
E.rheumatic myocarditis
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