New English in Medicine
New English in Medicine
New English in Medicine
-----------*******-----------Nguyn sinh k
NEW
English in medicine
VOLUME ONE
(Higher education material) Use only in Army Ting anh dng trong y hc
ew English in medicine
Hi ng duyt ti liu, gio trnh, gio khoa Ca hc vin qun y Trung tng, GS.TS. Phm Gia Khnh Gim c Hc vin Qun y Thiu tng, BS. Nguyn Quang Phc Chnh u Hc vin Qun y Thiu tng, GS.TS. V c Mi Ph gim c Hc vin Qun y Thiu tng, GS.TS. L Bch Quang Ph gim c Hc vin Qun y Thiu tng, PGS.TS. ng Ngc Hng Ph gim c Hc vin Qun y Gim c Bnh vin 103 i t, PGS.TS. Nguyn Tin Bnh Ph gim c Hc vin Qun y i t, GS.TS. Nguyn Vn Mi Ph gim c Bnh vin 103 i t, PGS.TS. L Nm Gim c Vin Bng Quc gia i t, BS. Phm Quc ng H trng H o to Trung hc i t, BS. Tin Lng Trng phng Thng tin Khoa hc Cng ngh Mi trng Thng t, BS. Nguyn Vn Chnh Ph trng phng Thng tin Khoa hc Cng ngh Mi trng - Ch tch - Ph ch tch - y vin - y vin
- y vin
- Th k
The publishing house and author would like to have readers comment
The military medical universitys council of reviewing teaching materials and textbooks
Lieutenant-General Pham Gia Khanh, Ph.D., Prof. Rector of Military Medical University Chairman Major-General nguyen quang phuc, m.d. Political Commissar of Military Medical University Vicechairman Major-General vu duc moi, Ph.D.,Prof. Vice-Rector of Military Medical University Commissioner Major-General le bach quang, Ph.D., Prof. Vice-Rector of Military Medical University Commissioner Major-General dang ngoc hung, Ph.D., A.Prof. Vice-Rector of Military Medical University Director of Hospital No. 103 Commissioner Senior-Colonel Nguyen Tien Binh, Ph.D., A.Prof. Vice-Rector of Military Medical University Commissioner Senior-Colonel nguyen van mui, Ph.D., Prof. Vice-Director of Hospital No. 103 Commissioner Senior-Colonel le nam, Ph.D., A.Prof. Director of National Burn Institute Commissioner Senior-Colonel pham quoc dang, M.D. Head of Secondary Vocational School Commissioner Senioe-Colonel Do tien luong, M.D. Departmental Head of Scientific, Technological and Environmental Information Commissioner Colonel nguyen van chinh, M.D. Departmental Head of Scientific, Technological and Environmental Information Secretary
Hc vin qun y
-----------*******-----------Nguyn sinh k
-----------*******-----------Nguyn sinh k
NEW
English in medicine
Use only in Army
VOLUME ONE
Li gii thiu
Nh chng ta u bit, trong thi i ngy nay, ting Anh rt cn thit v c mt v tr c bit v ting Anh c
s dng rng ri trn khp th gii v tt nhin n tr thnh ngn ng giao tip quc t, mt ngn ng c s dng trong nhiu lnh vc khc nhau, nht l trong lnh vc nghin cu khoa hc v cng ngh. Trong nhiu nm gn y, Ting Anh Chuyn Ngnh (ESP) c pht trin chuyn su v tp trung vo vic thit k chng trnh v bin son gio trnh giao tip. V hin nay vic thit k chng trnh v bin son gio trnh Ting Anh Chuyn Ngnh phi tu thuc vo tng lnh vc v mc tiu c th. Tp gio trnh Ting Anh Dng Trong Y Hc, n phm mi ny dnh cho cc sinh vin y khoa v nhng ngi c quan tm trong ngnh y, c nhu cu hc ting Anh chuyn ngnh v nng cao trnh ting Anh chuyn ngnh trong tng lai. Tp gio trnh ting Anh dng trong y hc, n phm mi ny rt linh hot, c th s dng trn lp hc hoc t hc v cng c th vn dng c hai. Tp gio trnh ny c th gip bn luyn c hiu, thnh lp cc t, cm t, dng cu, vit cc on vn, v tm tt cc vn bn, vv ... Chng ti hy vng rng cc bn c th thu c nhiu thun li t tp gio trnh ny. Trung tng, Gio s, Tin s Phm Gia Khnh
Introduction
As we know, nowadays, English is very necessary and it has a special position since it has been widely used throughout the world, and of course, it has become the international language of communication and the language of various fields, chiefly of researching technology and science. In the recent years, ESP (English for Specific Purposes) has become a major developmental focus in the area of what maybe called communicative syllabus design and materials production. And now ESP syllabus and materials design must belong to a concrete case of a taget group. This New English in Medicine is intended for medical students and other with a professional interest in medicine who need to study ESP in medicine and to improve their knowledge of ESP in the future. New English in Medicine is flexible and can be used in class, on your own, or both. It can help you to practise reading comprehension, building words and word combination and writing sentences, paragraghs, or summarizing, and so on. We hope that you can get a lot of advantages from it. Lieutenant-general Pham Gia Khanh, Ph.D., Prof.
Li ni u
B sch ny dnh cho cc sinh vin y khoa hc xong chng trnh ting Anh c bn. Nhng ngi nm vng cc thi, cc cu trc cu v cc loi cu ca ngn ng ting Anh. B sch ny c chia thnh hai tp. Tt c cc bi u thuc chuyn ngnh y. C nhiu thun li cho vic hc ting Anh chuyn ngnh. B sch gip cho vic luyn tp t vng, c hiu, tm tt vn bn, t t, qun t, gii t, ng ng t, t kp, t ni v cc dng thay th danh t. Chng ti hy vng, t cc bi tp cc sinh vin s c c nhng thun li trong vic m rng vn kin thc ting Anh ca mnh v thy nhng thng tin tht hp dn. T y lng mnh, chng ti mong mun c cm n nhng ngi gip chng ti hon thnh v xut bn b sch ny. Chng ti rt mong nhn c nhng li ph bnh, nhn xt hon thin cho ln xut bn sau. i t Nguyn Sinh K
Preface
This book is for medical students who have already learned the basic general English. They know the basic tenses, structures and sentences of English. This book is in two volumes. All lessons are on medicine. There are many advantages to learning English on medical speciality. They provide practice with vocabulary, comprehension, summarizing, word forms, articles, prepositions, phrasal verbs, compound words, connecting words, and noun substitutes. We hope that the students will find the exercises useful in expanding their knowledge of the English language and that they will find the information interesting. From the bottom of our heart, we would like to thank several people for their help in publishing this book. We look forward to any comments and remarks on the book for the perfection of the next edition. Senior colonel Sinh Ky Nguyen
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Contents
preface Lesson one Lesson two Lesson three Lesson four Lesson five Lesson six Lesson seven Lesson eight Lesson nine Lesson ten Lesson eleven Lesson twelve Lesson thirteen Lesson fourteen
Pag e 1 Medical Specialists 3 Industrial Medicine 8 Introduction to General Surgery 14 Surgical Service to the Population 20 The Common Cold 26 Influenza 33 Headaches 38 Cholesterol and Heart Disease 43 On migraine Headache and Hypertensive 52 Headache Diseases and Injuries of the Skull 58 Cigarette Smoking and Chronic Bronchitis 64 Transplants - New body Parts 70 Shock 75 CPR 81
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Obstetricians are specialists who care for pregnant women. They check women before the birth of their babies and deliver the babies. Pediatricians are physicians who care for children. Family medical practice is new specialization. A family doctor cares for the whole family. This doctor cares for the patients who have all kinds of illness. A family practice doctor takes care of babies and old people, but the family physician usually sends very sick patients to other specialists. Emergency medicine is another speciality. Most hospitals have an emergency room. People sometimes have accidents at home or at work, or they sometimes become ill suddenly. Ambulances, and sometimes helicopters, take people to hospital emergency rooms. Emergency specialists give immediate treatment. There are many other medical specialists. These specialists, doctors, nurses, and other medical people, all work together to help their patients. They not only heal people who are sick, but also they try to prevent diseases.
I. WORD STUDY
drug to heal to prevent vaccination smallpox cholera polio (vt ca poliomyelitis measles to specialize ophthalmologist / drg / (n) / hi:l / (vt) / pri'vent / (v) / vsi'nein / (n) /'sm:lpks / (n) / 'klr / (n) /'pouliou / (n) / poulioumai'laitis / ) / 'mi:zlz / (n) / 'spe laiz / (vi/vt) / f l'mldist/ (n) thuc cha (bnh) phng (bnh) vic dng vaccine bnh u ma bnh t vim ty xm, bi lit
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to treat disease patient operation surgeon anesthesiologist obstetrician pregnant pediatrician physician ambulance
/ tri:t / (v) / di'zi:z / (n) / 'peint / (n) / p'rein / (n) / 's:dn / (n) / nis i:zj'ldist / (n) / bste'trin / (n) / 'pregnnt / (adj) / pi:di'trin / (n) / fi'zin / (n) / 'mbjulns / (n)
iu tr bnh bnh nhn ca phu thut nh phu thut bc s gy m bc s sn khoa c thai bc s nhi khoa thy thuc xe cu thng
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7. Operations on the heart. .................................................................................................. .......................... 8. A family doctor. .................................................................................................. .......................... 9. Accidents at home or at work. .................................................................................................. .......................... 10. Hospital emergency rooms. .................................................................................................. .......................... 11. Immediate treatment. .................................................................................................. .......................... 12. Different medical specializations. .................................................................................................. ..........................
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5. What do dentists do? .................................................................................................. ........................... 6. What do surgeons use operations for? .................................................................................................. ........................... 7. Who do obstetricians care for ? and when? .................................................................................................. ........................... 8. What kinds of illness can a family doctor treat? .................................................................................................. ........................... 9. Where do ambulances, and sometimes helicopters take patients to ? .................................................................................................. ........................... 10. What do specialists, doctors, nurses and other medical people work together for ? ............................................................................................... ............................
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V. Gap - filling
Fill each blank in the following passage with only ONE suitable word. Nurses are a necessary part of health (1)...... Like doctors, they have two jobs. They (2)........sick people and take care of patients. Most nurses (3).......work in hospitals are general-duty nurses. However, many nurses in other places (4).......as clinics, schools, factories and private homes. There are also jobs in the offices of doctors and dentists. Therefore, there are many (5)..........kinds of nursing jobs. There are two kinds of nurses: professional and practical. Professional nurses have two to five years of (6)....... education. Both kinds of nurses learn in classes and in clinics. In their classrooms, they learn about the anatomy of the (7) .........., chemistry, the nutrition of foods, drugs and medicines and the psychology. In their clinical studies, they work with (8).......... they learn to take a (9) ............temperature, blood pressure and pulse rate. They also practice different (10)........in hospitals. Practical nurses are (11)................kind of nurses. These nurses also (12)..............about nursing care, but they study for only one year or two. Practical nurses usually help (13)..................nurses with the patients. Professional nurses, on the other hand usually assist (14).................
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engineers study accidents and their causes. Second, doctors and safety engineers work together to change the machines or the jobs because they want to prevent more accidents or illnesses. Third, they educate workers about the dangers in their jobs. They teach the workers about safety on the job. Education is necessary for prevention. There are many causes of accidents and illness at work. Among them, chemicals, noise, and radiation are a few. For example, gasses in mines cause accidents and poison miners. Toxic chemicals such as lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), and silica (SiO2) made people sick in the past, and they make people sick today. In addition, there are new chemicals, and some of them are toxic. They harm the skin, the lungs, and other internal organs such as the heart, liver, or kidney. Industrial noise sometimes causes deafness. People who work around loud noise for a long time sometimes become hard of hearing. Many things cause illnesses and injuries on the job. Occupational physicians and safety engineers often prevent these problems. After they find the causes, they plan and design new machines to prevent accidents in the future. They design different ways to store and transport toxic chemicals. They measure and control gases in the air. They set standards for work in the dangerous situations. For example, airport workers must cover their ears near the airplanes outside. Some workers must wear personal protective means, like eye goggles, hard hats and safety shoes. After careful study, both doctors and safety engineers do many things to decrease the danger of injuries and illnesses on the job. They make the work area a safe place.
I. WORD STUDY
occupational medicine lung cancer / kju:'peinl / / l'kns / y hc lao ng ung th phi
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black diseases construction (n) electrical shock occupational doctors protect (v) prevent (v) chemicals (n) radiation (n) poison (v) toxic (adj) lead (n) mercury (n) silica (n) liver (n) kidney (n) deafness (n) x-ray (n)
xy dng / kn'strkn / in git / i 'lektrikl k / and safety bc s v k s an engineers ton lao ng / endzi'niz / / pro'tekt / / pri'vent / / / / / / / / / / / / 'kemiklz / reidi'ein / 'pizn / 'tksik / led / 'm:kjuri / 'silik / 'liv / 'kidni / 'defnis / 'eks 'rei / bo v, bo h phng, ngn nga ho cht s bc x gy c c ch thu ngn silic dioxyt gan thn tt ic tia X, tia Rngen
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b. Safety engineers study the causes of accidents at work. c. Occupational doctors and safety engineers help make the work place safe.
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.. 5. You must shout to make him hear you because of his. (deaf, deafness). .. 6. The patient is very.. (ill, illness). .. 7. There are manychemicals. (poison, poisonous) .. 8. Their lives were in., but the doctor saved them. (danger, dangerous) .. 9. Safety shoes protection, protective) are. clothing. (protect,
.10. The patient needed an. to save her life.(operate, operation) .11. Safety engineers workers about dangers in their jobs. (educate, education) ..12. ........... medicine is another special field of medicine. (Prevent, Prevention, Preventive)
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..1. People sometimes get sick. ..2. People work with dangerous chemicals. ..1. Miners have black lung disease. ..2. Miners breathe coal dust for many years. ..1. Doctors learn about the causes of diseases. ..2. Doctors protect workers from the diseases. ..1. Workers work with toxic chemicals. ..2. Workers get sick from the chemicals. ..1. Workers have fewer accidents on the job. ..2. Workers study about job safety.
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the mine, the miners die. They sometimes take a small bird into the mine with them. The bird will die from the gas first. Then the miners know that they must leave the mine quickly. Because of the poisonous gases, it is important to bring fresh air into the mine. The fourth danger is from coal dust, which makes the air inside the mine dirty. Miners who breathe large amounts of dust for many years are likely to develop black lung disease. This disease causes problems with the lungs and even death. Mines are safer places to work today than they were in the late eighteenth century. In 1900, 3.5 miners per 1000 were killed in mine accidents each year. Today, the death rate is 0.5 per 1000. Safety standards have improved conditions in the mines. ...........1. Explosions kill 100.000 workers every year. ...........2. When miners are trapped, they cannot get out of the mine. ...........3. Methane can cause an explosion. .......... 4. If there is a lot of fresh air in the mine, there will be accidents with gases. ...........5. Black lung disease is a serious disease. ...........6. People do not die of black lung disease. .......... 7. Fewer miners died in 1900 than they do today. ...........8. Mining is still a dangerous job. ...........9. Carbon monoxide may kills miners. ...........10. The air inside mines is always safe to breathe.
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solve this difficult problem. The brilliant Russian surgeon N.I.Pirogov was the first to voice the assumption that wounds were infected by invasion of special causative agents named by him "miasmas". In 1836, the famous French scientist Pasteur published the results of his remarkable studies of the processes of putrefaction. Pasteur proved that these processes were evoked by minute living organisms, bacteria. On the basis of Pasteur's work, the British surgeon Lister concluded that the purulence of wounds was also caused by bacteria which found their way into the wounds from the air. To protect the wounds from the penetration of bacteria or to destroy these bacteria after their penetration into the wounds. Lister began to irrigate the wounds with a solution of carbolic acid and to treat the instruments and dressing material to be used in the operations with the same solution. The method elaborated by Lister was given the name of antiseptic. This method gave fine results. During the years that followed scientists found that to protect the wounds from infection it was enough to treat all objects to be handled and used during an operation with a physical agent, namely, heat. This new method of disinfections was given the name of asepsis. The antiseptic and aseptic methods of treating wounds revolutionized surgery and almost completely eliminated the danger of infecting wounds to be operated on.
I. WORD STUDY
introduction (n) / intr'dkn / s gii thiu, li gii
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thiu manipulation (n) thao tc / mnipju'lein / puncture (n) s chch, ch chch / 'pkt / suturing (n) s khu / 'sju:tri / to designate (v) / 'dezigneit / t tn, gi tn superficial (adj) b mt / sju:p'fil / to meet with (v) / mi:t / gp phi century (n) th k, trm nm / 'senturi / to make it solve. lm cho...c th gii possible to quyt ... brilliant (adj) / briljnt / li lc, ti gii to voice (v) / vis/ ni ln, pht biu invasion (n) / in'vein / s xm nhp causative agent /'k:ze tiv tc nhn gy bnh, 'eidnt / gy vim miasmas (n) / mi'zmz / kh c, chng kh to publish (v) cng b, xut bn / 'pbli / remarkable (adj ) / ri'ma:kbl / xut sc, ng ch putrefaction (n) s thi ra / pju:tri'fkn / minute (adj) / mai'nju:t / rt nh living organism / ' :gnizm / sinh vt on the basic of / 'beisis / trn c s ca to conclude (v) / kn'klu:d / kt lun to find one's way / wei / into vo c penetration (n) s xm nhp / peni'trein / irrigate (v) / 'irigeit / ra carbolic acid / ka:'blik 'sid / axit cacbonlic to treat (v) / tri :t / x l instrument (n) / 'instrumnt / dng c antiseptic (n),(adj) / nti'septik/ kh trng object (n) / 'bdzikt / dng c, vt to handle (v) / 'hndl / cm, nm physical agent tc nhn l hc disinfection (n) s kh trng, ty u / disin'fekn /
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/ / / /
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9. What did the British surgeon Lister begin to do to protect the wounds from the penetration of bacteria? ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 10. With what did he treat the instruments to be used in the operations? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 11. What name was given to Lister 's method? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 12. What new method did the scientists find during the years that followed? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 13. What is the significance of the antiseptic and aseptic methods for surgery? ...................................................................................................... ............................
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2. Lister began to irrigate the wounds with a solution of carbolic acid and to treat the instruments and dressing material to be used in the operations with the same solution. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 3. During the years that followed scientists found that to protect the wounds from infection it was enough to treat all objects to be handled and used during an operation with heat. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 4. These methods of treating wounds completely eliminated the danger of infecting wounds to be operated on. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 5. The patient to be examined was brought to the casualty ward where he was first asked to give his name, age and address. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 6. The patient to be admitted to the clinic had a very high temperature and showed evidence of an acute illness.
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...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 7. Measures to be taken to protect the health of people are various. ...................................................................................................... ............................
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...................................................................................................... ............................ 2. Sau nhng cuc phu thut nh vy thng b vim nng, gy ra t vong. ...................................................................................................... ............................ 3. Pirogov l ngi u tin nu mt gi thuyt cho rng nhng vt thng b vim nhim do s xm nhp ca nhng tc nhn gy vim c gi l "chng kh". ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 4. Nh bc hc Php Pasteur chng minh rng nhng tin trnh vim nhim l do nhng sinh vt rt nh, vi khun gy nn. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 5. Nh bc hc Anh Lister ra vt thng bng dung dch axit carbolic ngn nga s xm nhp ca vi khun. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................
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To give quick and effective aid, there must be a special organization with transport facilities at ones disposal. Many patients with surgical trauma are not in need of hospital treatment. In cases of minor injuries and mild inflammatory processes, as well as after discharge from hospital, the necessary treatment may be given in a dispensary or a polyclinic where the patient comes for special procedures and then goes home. Patients who seek medical assistance in dispensaries and polyclinics for the first time are also given a thorough examination. This form of aid is known as outpatient or polyclinic aid. The most complicated surgical operations can be performed only in well- equipped special medical institutions where patients are admitted for a long stay. Surgical service in those institutions is referred to as hospital surgical aid. To render surgical assistance is not an easy task; it requires a wide variety of knowledge and skill. I. WORD STUDY surgical (adj) surgical service mainly (adv) to equip (v) first aid for which reason basic (adj) rule (n) / 'meinli / / i'kwip / / 'ri:zn / / 'beisik / / rul / 34 / 's:dikl / ngoi khoa, phu thut vic iu tr ngoi khoa phn ln; ch yu trang b s cu v th, v l do ny c bn nguyn tc, quy tc
emergency, urgent aid to finish (v) regular (adj) orderly (n) duty (n) to be on duty therefore readiness (n) to require (v) to deliver (v) in need of layman (n) the duty many of
cp cu / 'fini / / 'regjul / / ':dli / / 'dju:ti / / 'f: / / 'redinis / / ri'kwai / / di'liv / / 'leimn / as laymen possible is... kt thc, hon thnh thng l, chnh thc h l nhim v trc v vy (s) sn sng cn, i hi a n cn ngi khng c chuyn mn as nhim v ca cng nhiu ...
ngi khng c chuyn facilities (n) transport (n) at ones disposal surgical trauma minor (adj) a thorough examination stay (n) to refer to (v) hospital surgical aid to render (v)
mn th cng tt l phi / f'silitiz / / 'trnsp:t / / dis'pouzl / / 's:dikl tr:m / / 'main / / ' r igzmi'nein / / stei / / ri'f: / / 'hspitl / / 'rend / 35
phng tin vn chuyn sn c dng sang chn nh, nh, th yu kim tra, khm ton din s lu li, li ni n, xem nh iu tr ngoi khoa ni vin lm, lm cho
especially equipped medical institutions : nhng c s y t c nhng trang b chuyn dng a wide variety of knowledge v nhiu mt / 'nlid / kin thc hiu rng
...................................................................................................
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8. Where may the necessary treatment be given in cases of minor injures and mild inflammatory processes? ................................................................................................... ................................................................................................... 9. Where does a patient go for special procedures? ................................................................................................... 10. What are patients who seek medical assistance for the first time given at polyclinics? ................................................................................................... ................................................................................................... 11. What do we call the form of aid given in a dispensary or a polyclinic? ................................................................................................... 12. Where are the most complicated surgical operations performed? ................................................................................................... 13. What is required from a person to render surgical assistance in complicated cases? ...................................................................................................
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................................................................................................... 4. The patients in need of emergency aid must be brought to medical institutions. ................................................................................................... 5. To render urgent aid, surgical institutions must have in readiness everything required for administering it. ................................................................................................... ................................................................................................... 6. The necessary treatment may be given in a dispensary or polyclinic where the patient comes for special procedures. ................................................................................................... ................................................................................................... 7. To render surgical assistance is not an easy task it requires a wide variety of knowledge and skill. ................................................................................................... ................................................................................................... 8. To give quick and effective aid, there must be a special organization with transport facilities at ones disposal. ................................................................................................... ................................................................................................... 9. The object of epidemic diseases. microbiology is to combat and prevent
...................................................................................................
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............................................................................................... ....
3. Nhng bnh nhn nh vy c a n bnh vin, h c cc bc s chuyn khoa giu kinh nghim cp cu. ................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................
V. GAp - filling
Choose one word in the box and fill in each gap. generally with who public on healthy health in attention personally general whom beings without people
The foreign scientists in (1)................... health who visit our country draw everybodys (2)................to three things that made a lasting impression on them. People in (3)...................... are very health conscious. They are not so much concerned (4)..................... their ailments and symptoms, as they are with things they can do to be (5)......................... Their medical authorities encourage this attitude. Doctors are the men (6).................. must take this stand: When you are ill, always consult us; but health is not made in hospitals, and to win good health, everyone is (7)................responsible for using in daily life the scientific principles of health. Medical scientists (8)................ the world insist that health is the natural way of life for human (9)......................; the goal of their research is to find out how people can live long, healthy
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ever
having
to
take
medicine
or
Lesson five
THE COMMON COLD
Your head aches and you sneeze and cough. Your nose is all stuffed up, and it keeps running, so you have to blow it every few minutes. You know by these symptoms that you have a cold, and you feel completely miserable. Youre not sure if you live through the day. Everyone suffers from the common cold at some time or other. It isnt a serious illness, but over a billion dollars a year is spent on different kinds of cold medicine every year. This medicine can relieve the symptoms. That is, it can make you cough less, make your headache less intense, and stop your nose running for a while. However, it cant cure your cold. So far, there is no cure for the common cold and no medicine to prevent it. Even though there is no cure or preventive medicine for colds, people have all kinds of ideas about how to prevent and treat colds. Some people think that if you eat lots of onions and garlic, you wont catch cold. Others say that you should avoid getting wet and chilled or you will catch cold. However, this is apparently not so. In an experiment in England, a group of volunteers took a bath, put on cold wet clothing and stood in cold rooms. Others stood outside in a cold rain until they were wet through to the skin. The researchers didnt find any connection between being wet and chilly and catching a cold. Dr. Linus Pauling, the winner of the 1954 Nobel prize for chemistry, did experiments with vitamin C. He says his experiments prove that if you take 1 to 2 grams a day of vitamin C, it will prevent colds. Other researchers have tested this theory for years. They have not been able to find that large amounts of vitamin C have any effect on colds. Meanwhile,
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millions of dollars are spent on vitamin C every year. This money is possibly all wasted. Colds are caused by a virus. Viruses are even smaller than bacteria, and they cause different kinds of diseases. So far, scientists have found over 200 kinds of viruses that cause colds. Some diseases can be prevented by a vaccine. This liquid is injected into the arm and the person is safe from catching that disease. However, it is probably impossible to develop a vaccine that could work against 200 different viruses. Certainly no one would want to have 200 different shots, one for each cold virus, even if they were available. One problem with the common cold is that the symptoms are very similar to the symptoms of influenza, or flu for short. Influenza is a much more serious disease, especially for pregnant women, people over 65, and people already suffering from another disease, such as a heart problem. Even doctors cannot always tell the difference between the symptoms without doing laboratory tests. One difference between colds and flu is fever. A person with a cold does not have a high body temperature, but about half of all flu patients do. A similarity between colds and flu is that they are both contagious. One person catches a cold or the flu from another person; they dont begin inside the body as heart disease does. Researchers continue searching for a way to cure or prevent colds. Since colds and flu are closely related diseases, scientists hope that if they find a cure for one, it will also have an effect on the other. Doctors dont know what causes colds, but they are beginning to learn how they spread. When scientists discovered in the 1950s that viruses cause colds, it seemed logical to believe that they were spread when people sneezed and coughed. They believed that the explosive cough or sneeze sent the viruses shooting out into the air and then entering the mouth or nose of anyone nearby.
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However, researches show that this is not true. Most cold viruses are spread through the hands. When you have a cold and blow your nose, you get viruses on your hands. When you touch another persons hand, and when that person touches his or her mouth, nose, or eyes, the virus enters the body. It isnt even necessary to touch the person directly. Cold viruses spread when roommates or members of a family touch the same dishes, towels, and furniture. You can even pick up a virus when you touch the doorknob on your classroom door, or when you touch things in public buildings. It seems completely illogical, but kissing apparently doesnt spread colds. In one study, volunteers with a cold kissed volunteers without a cold. Only 8 percent without a cold caught one. How can you use all this information for your own good health? Students are in close contact in the classroom, the cafeteria or dining room, and dormitories or apartments. When someone you know catches a cold, try to avoid physical contact with that person. If you catch a cold yourself, keep your towel and dishes separate from everyone elses. Try not to touch things that belong to others. Dont touch other people, and dont shake hands. Explain why, however, you dont want people to think you are impolite. Wash your hands often if you have a cold or if anyone around you has one. Colds are miserable. It is worth the trouble to try to avoid catching them or giving them to others.
I. Word study
sneeze (v),(n) / cough (v),(n) / miserable (adj) / at some time or other (phrase) symptom (n) / sni:z / k:f / 'mizrbl / ht hi ho kh s, bt hnh hoc lc ny hay lc khc triu trng
'simptm /
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preventive (adj) avoid (vt) chilled (adj) apparently (adv) experiment (n), (v) volunteer (n), (v) researcher (n) connection (n) prove (vt), (vi) theory (n) amount (n) meanwhile (adv) to be wasted (phr) to be injected into. (phr) shot (n) available (adj) to be similar to. (phr) pregnant (adj) similarity (n) contagious (adj) scientist (n) to discover (vt) explosive cough (phr)
/ pri'ventiv / / / / / / / / / / / / / /
phng bnh, phng nga 'vid / trnh b lnh cng tild / 'prntli / hin nhin, r rng iks'permnt / th nghim vln'ti / ngi tnh nguyn nh nghin cu ri's:t / s lin quan, mi k 'nekn / quan h pru:v / chng minh, t ra iri / thuyt, l thuyt 'maunt / s lng 'mi:n wail / trong khi 'weistid / b lng ph in'dzektid / c tim vo.. mi tim c sn tng t, ging nh. 'pregnnt / c thai sim'lrti / s ging nhau kn'teidzs / ly lan 'saintist / nh khoa hc dis'kv / khm ph ra, pht hin ra ik'plousiv k:f ho bt ra blou / 'ru:mmeit / 'f:nit / 'd:nb / knouz ph mi bn cng phng c qu m ca tip xc
/ t / / 'veilbl / / 'simil / / / / / /
/ / to blow ones nose (phr) / roommate (n) / furniture (n) / doorknob (n) / to be in close contact /
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1. is more serious than a cold. 2. When you have a cold, youand 3. A pillow is with feathers, cotton, or polyester. 4. Some people like to have their fruit.... instead of at room temperature. 5. Sweden gives Nobel every year to people who have created great things. 6. When you have a headache, you probably feel 7. Babies should childhood diseases. receiveto prevent common
Then they wont catch these.diseases. 8. Roald Amundsen reached the South Pole and began the journey back to his ship., captain Scott and his men were trapped in their tent by blizzards.
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9. In most countries, it is..to shake hands when you meet someone. 2. Choose one word in the box and fill in each sentence below. fever symptoms relieve injected pregnant doorknob contact volunteer worth vitamins viruses contagious
1. You have to turn theto open a door. 2. When your temperature a is above normal, you have
3. There is no physicalin tenses. The players dont touch each other when they play. 4. Ms. Davis is She is going to have a baby in May. 5. How much is goldtoday? 6. Colds are caused by.. 7. Aspirin can.some headaches. 8. What are the...of a cold? How do you know you have one? 9. Thousands of people..to work for the Red Cross without pay.
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3. Sometimes the sky is beautiful at dawn. 4. Tom got hit in the forehead with the ball. 5. The army attacked at dawn to surprise the enemy. 6. Rita has a recurring pain in the stomach. It comes and goes. 7. The waves move higher up on the beach as the tide comes in. 8. Iron and cotton are raw materials. 9. Dan pounded on the table to get everyones attention. 10. Every rock music band has a drummer. 11. The government keeps a record of the birth of every child.
3. An experiment in England showed that a. getting chilled probably causes colds. b. keeping warm and dry probably prevents colds. c. getting chilled probably doesnt cause a cold. 4. Which one of these sentences is not true? a. Researchers have shown that vitamin C can prevent colds. b. Dr. Linus Paulings research shows that vitamin C prevents colds. c. People take vitamin C because they believe it prevents colds. 5. .. prevent colds. a. There is no vaccine to b. There will probably be a vaccine in the future to c. You can have a vaccine injected into your arm to
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6. Most colds spread a. by hand contact b. when people cough and sneeze c. through kissing 7. The best way to avoid getting colds is to a. avoid touching people who have colds or the objects they use b. avoid getting chilled or wet c. avoid standing near people who have a cold
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........ .. 7. Why cant a doctor tell if a person has a cold or the flu? ........ ..
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It is in the typical form of grippe that the onset is sudden, beginning with chills, muscular pains and aches in the back and limbs, and bronchitis. Nervous symptoms, e.g. , headache and in severe cases convulsions in babies are usually present. There are mild cases of the disease. The duration of the disease in a mild case is usually three to four days and the temperature is not very high. It is only in severe cases that the patient's temperature is very high and rises higher with each succeeding paroxysm. Distressing fever and other symptoms, e.g. , acute catarrhal inflammation of the bronchi, muscular pain, and so on, persist for several days. Sometimes pneumonia develops and even death may occur in two or three days. Therefore, it is in the very young or when there are pulmonary complications that grippe is especially serious. In order to minimize the severity of the attack in grippe and to protect the patient from secondary infection, the patient must go to bed at the beginning of an attack and not be up again without the approval of his physician. The effects of grippe may persist for a long period of time, therefore a convalescent becomes sensitive to heat, cold, draughts, and so on, he easily gets colds, coughs and other respiratory diseases.
I. WORD STUDY
influenza (n) epidemic (adj) depression (n) distressing (adj) distressing fever larynx (n) bronchi (n) / influ'enz / / epi'demik / / di'pren / / dis'tresi / / 'fi:v / / 'lriks / / 'brkai / bnh cm dch s kh chu, s su ut lm kh chu, lm mt mi cn st thanh qun cung phi, ph
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neuralgic (adj) gastrointestinal disorder disturbance (n) nervous disturbance to be liable to bronchitis (n) convulsion (n) mild (adj) succeeding (adj) paroxysm (n) pulmonary (adj) complication (n) to minimize (v) severity (n) attack (n) to protect (v) secondary (adj) to be up without (prep) approval (n) effect (n) draught (n) convalescent (n)
/ nju'rldik / / 'gstrouin'testinl / / dist:bns / / 'n:vs dis't:bns/ / 'laibl / / br 'kaitis / / kn'vln / / maild / / sk'si:di / / 'prsizm / / 'plmnri / / kmpli'kein / / 'minimaiz / / / / / / / / / / si 'veriti / 'tk / prtekt / 'sekndri / wi'aut / 'pru:vl / i'fekt / dr:t / knv'lesnt /
dy
s ri lon, tn thng s tn thng h thn kinh c kh nng b vim ph qun chng co git nh, du k tip, tip theo cn kch pht (thuc) phi, b bnh phi bin chng gim n mc ti thiu mc trm trng cn, trn bo v th pht dy khng c s cho php hu qu, tc dng gi la, lung gi bnh nhn ang hi phc
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................................................................................................... 2. What kind of disease is it? ................................................................................................... 3. What ages are liable to the disease? ................................................................................................... 4. In what cases and in whom is vomiting frequent?
............................................................................................... ....
5. What symptoms are usually present in grippe? ................................................................................................... 6. What is the typical form of the disease? ................................................................................................... 7. What nervous symptoms are usually present in severe cases? ................................................................................................... 8. What are the characteristic features of a mild case? of a severe one? ................................................................................................... 9. What may develop sometimes? ................................................................................................... 10. What else may occur? ................................................................................................... 11. What must one do in order to minimize the severity of the attack in grippe? ................................................................................................... 12. When may the patient be up again? ................................................................................................... 13. How long may the effects of grippe persist? ................................................................................................... 14. What does a convalescent become sensitive to? ...................................................................................................
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.................................................................................................
4. Pains often persist .....................for several days. 5. In order to protect the patient from.infection, he must be put to bed at the very beginning of an attack.
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morning and gets worse as the hours pass. There is a steady pain, pressure, and a bursting feeling. Usually aspirin doesnt help a muscle headache very much. About 40 percent of all headaches start in the head and neck muscles. Another 40 percent start in the arteries. How do doctors treat headaches? If a person has frequent headaches, the doctor first has to decide what kind they are. Medicine can help, but there are other ways to treat them. The doctor asks the patient to analyze his or her daily living patterns. A change in diet or an increase in exercise might stop the headaches. If the patient realizes that difficulties at home, at work, or at school are causing the tension, it might be possible to make changes and decrease these problems. Psychological problems and even medicine for another physical problem can cause headaches. The doctor has to discuss and analyze all these patterns of the patients life. A headache can also be a signal of a more serious problem. Everyone has headaches from time to time. If they continue over several days, or keep recurring, it is time to talk to a doctor. There is no magic cure for headaches, but a doctor can help control most of them because of recent researches.
I. WORD STUDY
headache (n) to pound (vt) hammer (n) to explode (vt/vi) artery (n) to swell (vt/vi) vision to occur (v) blurred (adj) migraine (n) / / / / / / / / / / / 'heideik / paund / 'hm / ik'sploud / 'a:tri / swel / 'vin / k: / bl:d/ 'maigrein, mi:grein au u nh dn dp ci ba lm n, n ng mch sng ln, phng ln th gic xy ra, xut hin b m, nha au na u
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cluster (n) steady (adj) muscle (n) forehead (n) bursting (adj) aspirin (n) tension to analyze (v) pattern (n) psychological (adj) physical (adj) to recur (v)
/ / / / / / / / / / / /
'klst / s'tedi / 'msl / 'f:rid, 'f:hed / 'b:sti / 'sprin, 'sprin / 'tenn, 'tenn / 'nlaiz / 'ptn , ptn / saik'ldikl / 'fizikl , 'fizikl / ri'k: /
m, cm dai dng bp tht trn n tung thuc aspirin, thuc gim au cng thng phn tch kiu, cch, mu (thuc) tm l (thuc) c th ti pht
II. filling - in
Choose one word in the box and fill in each sentence below. a. ache e. warned i. blurred n. arteries b. vision f. hammer k. drum o. forehead c. vomit g. cures l. physical p. swell d. steady h. patients m. muscles q. tense
1. When you are sick and in pain, your stomach may protest and make you. 2. The teacher.. the children that they had to behave or there would be no party. 3. People in the hospital are called 4. While Pat was swimming she got water in her eyes. Everything looked. 5. Students feel before an important exam. 6. Tension in the. of the neck can cause headache.
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7. The farmers were happy when a rain continued all night. 8. carry blood from the heart to the rest to the body. 9. Today there are.. for many diseases that used to kill people. 10. People with poor ... wear glasses or contact lenses. 11. You may get a stomach.. if you eat too much. 12. A completeexamination anyone entering the army. is necessary for
2. A migraine headache causes. a. blurred vision bursting feeling a. Sleep c. Arteries b. red and watery eyes c. a
4. ... have more of the kind of headache that leaves the head sore. a. Women people b. Men c. Older
5. A. headache usually starts in the morning and gets worse. a. migraine muscle b. cluster c.
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6. Tension causes a. headache. a. migraine b. cluster c. muscle 7. The muscle and the. headache are the most common. a. migraine a. the best treatment for one way to treat b. cluster c. warning c. 8. Medicine is..headache. b. not usually helpful for
9. A change in a patients life patterns can. a. help cure headaches b. cause headaches and b c. both a
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...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... ........................................................ 6. If you have a headache, will aspirin help? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 7. Why does a doctor analyze the life patterns of a headache patient? ...................................................................................................... ............................
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heart valves. Angiograms are x-rays of the heart arteries. They show fat deposits and blockages caused by high cholesterol. Heart disease begins in children as young as 3 years old. It occurs earlier in boys than in girls. Nearly half of teenagers have some fat deposits on their artery walls. Heart disease develops faster if we have high cholesterol levels and also smoke. What is a safe level of cholesterol? Adults have a high risk of heart attack if their cholesterol level is above 240 milligrams per deciliter of blood. Below 200 is better. In the Massachusetts study, no one with cholesterol level below 150 has ever had a heart attack. However, about half of American adults have cholesterol level above 200. To lower our cholesterol level, we must change our eating habits. Anything that comes from an animal is high in fat and high in cholesterol. The American Heart Association National Cholesterol Education Program says that fat should be no more than 30 percent of our diet. Blood cholesterol levels start to fall after 2 to 3 weeks of following a low-cholesterol, low-fat diet. Dietary changes alone can result in a 10 percent reduction of the everage person's cholesterol level. Aerobic exercise helps, too. Artery blockage can be reduced by as much as 40 percent through changes in diet and amount of exercise. We must educate everyone, including children in elementary schools. We must teach them responsibility for their health through classes in nutrition and aerobic exercise. For example, the smart snack is fruit. Children must be served fruit in the school cafeteria, along with low-fat meals. Schools must send recipes home with the children. Parents must include children in planning and preparing meals and shopping for food. Adults, including persons over the age of sixty-five, can lower their cholesterol by 30 or 40 percent. It is never too late to change. One man began his health program when he was seventy-three. By the time he was seventy-seven, he had lowered his arteria blockage from 50 percent to 13 percent and his cholesterol from 320 to 145 without drugs. He went on a
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vegetarian diet with only 10 percent fat, plus programs to reduce stress and get more exercise. A low-cholesterol diet that cuts out most animal products and high-fat vegetables may be unfamiliar to people. The Heart Association says to use no added fat of any kind. Don't fry food in oil. Cook it in water, vinegar, or vegetable water. Learn about grains and vegetables. Avoid egg yolks (the yellow part of the egg). Eat potatoes, beans, low-fat vegetables, and fruit. People often complain about low-fat diets before they have had time to get used to them. Food can taste good without cream, butter, and salt. You can use olive oil, mustard, fresh herbs, or yogurt instead. A new diet can cause general anxiety, when people feel worried and nervous about what is going to happen. They must learn to deal with the changes in their lives. Sometimes major changes in diet or lifestyle are easier than minor ones because the results are bigger and faster. Fast results encourage us. How can you control the amount of fat in your diet if you eat in restaurants? Restaurants must provide healthy meals that are low in fat, salt, and cholesterol. A diet is a personal thing. Restaurant owners should not make customers feel embarrassed because they want to follow a diet that is good for them. Restaurant owners must learn to give equal service to customers on a healthy diet. Some restaurants have items on the menu marked with a heart to show that they are low in fat, cholesterol, salt, or sugar. A few restaurants serve only these recipes. Heart disease causes one out of every four deaths in East Harlem in New York City. The East Harlem Healthy Heart Program is an educational program. It has 2 goals: to get people to change their diets and to find volunteers to help run educational activities. One way it educates is by street shows. Actors wear costumes and carry big pieces of plastic fat. They entertain so people will listen. Groups of children perform songs and dances that educate people about heart disease and diet.
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Volunteers lead walking and exercise groups to show people how to begin exercising. Volunteers also stand in supermarkets to suggest healthy food choices to shoppers. The volunteers have shoppers taste two kinds of milk to see which tastes better. Most people are surprised that the low- fat milk tastes better than the whole milk. Shoppers are encourged to buy low-fat milk instead of whole milk. Education costs money, but it also brings results. In 1983, only 35 percent of the American public knew their cholesterol levels. By 1990, 65 percent of the people had had theirs checked. People feel better if they lower their cholesterol through diet. Healthy people are more confident. They are more attactive to themselves, as well as to others. Their friends stare at them because they look so healthy. We can prevent heart disease by living a healthful lifestyle and eating the right kind of diet. If people don't do this, two out of three men amd women in America will eventually get heart diseases.
I. Word study
cholesterol (n) risk (n) exaggerated (adj) substance (n) to inherit (v) to stick (v) hardening of the arteries valve (n) angiogram (n) deposit (n) blockage (n) / k`lestrl / cht colesteron / risk / nguy c, ri ro / ig`zdreitid / thi qu, cng iu /`sbstns / cht / in`herit / tha k, di truyn /stik / cm, m, dn /`ha:dni v i: s cng ng mch `a:tri:z / / vlv / van / n`daiougrm / phim tia x mch / di`pzit / lp lng ng /`blkid / tc nghn
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elementary school / eli`mentri sku:l / (n) responsibility (n) / rispns`bilti / nutrition (n) / nju:`trin / snack (n) / snk / cafeteria (n) / kf`tiri / recipe (n) /`respi / vegetarian(n) unfamiliar ( to smb) (adj) added (adj) grain (n) vinegar (n) egg yolk (n) to complain (about) (v) olive oil (n) mustard (n) to deal (with) (v) to encourage (v) embarrassed (adj) to get smb to do smt costume (n) to entertain (v) to stare (v) eventually (adv) / vediterin / / nf`mili / / did / / grein / /`vinig / / eg jouk / / km`plein / /`liv il / /`mstd / / di:l / / in`krid / / im`brst /
xilit s gim bt (thuc) th dc nhp iu trng tiu hc trch nhim dinh dng ba n nh, qu nh n t phc v cng thc (nu n ...) ngi n chay xa l (i vi ai) thm, b sung ng cc, m cc gim lng trng ku ca, than phin du liu m tt gii quyt, cp, x l ng vin, khch l bi ri, lng tng khin ai lm g trang phc, o qun tip i, mua vui nhn chm chm, ngm nhn rt cuc, cui cng
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1. John's parents........................................ him to stay in school even though his grades were not very good. 2. ......................... exercise is good for the heart. 3. Is it impolite to ask someone ............................... questions? 4. Students often suffer from ..........................before an exam. 5. Some people are ............................ with a low-fat diet. 6. Mark ........................... red hair from his mother. 7. Is it impolite to ....................at people? 8. I'm hungry now, but it's 2 hours until dinner. I think I'll have a .................... 9. Open the ............................ so the water will flow freely through the pipes. 10. If you are sure of yourself, you have ..........................in yourself. 11. Most television stars are ........................... 12. ........................ occurs naturally in the blood.
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13. A .............................in how much fat you eat might make you healthier. 14. One of the students made a good ........................... for what we could do in the International Day program. 15. It is difficult to ..........................a child who doesn't behave well. 16. Smoking is a .............................in many diseases of the heart and lungs. 17. Tom said he earned $1000 a week, but he is really paid only $800. He ...................... 18. The doctor wants my mother to have an ........................ to see if her arteries are blocked. 19. This restaurant has good food, but the low. ........................ is
20. The ..........................of running away from the dog was too much for the old man, and he had a heart attack.
m. place
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V. Comprehension Questions
1. What are some symptoms of heart disease? .................................................................................................... ............................ 2. What is "hardening of the arteries"? How is it connected with high cholesterol?
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................................................................................................... ............................ 3. Why are angiograms useful? ................................................................................................... ............................ 4. At what age does heart disease start? ................................................................................................... ............................ 5. What level of cholesterol is believed to be safe? ................................................................................................... ............................ 6. How long does it take for cholesterol levels to start to drop? ................................................................................................... ............................ 7. How can schools help teach children healthy eating habits? ................................................................................................... ............................ 8. How can parents help teach children healthy eating habits? ................................................................................................... ............................ 9. What are some ways to reduce fat in your diet? ................................................................................................... ............................ 10. Describe the East Harlem Healthy Heart Program. ................................................................................................... ............................
VI. These words have more than one meaning. Circle the letter of the best meanings of the bold word. Choose the meanings of the words as they are used in these sentences.
1. Mr. Becker has worked in the field of computer science for 10 years.
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a. an area of specialization b. a place where animals or plants are raised c. the place where baseball is played 2. Carolyn is often late for class because she has to walk so far from her apartment. a. until now b. such for a long distance c. far enough 3. There are 2.2 pounds in a kilo. a. the unit of Enghlish money b. hits or strikes c. a unit of weight 4. Trappers sometimes cure the skins of the animals they catch before they sell them. a. dry and prepare for use b. make better c. a kind of medicine 5. The current value of gold is $321. a. The movement of electricity b. at this time c. the movement of a stream of water in the ocean 6. I know that it isn't so a. very b. too c. true 7. Ali and Muhammed live in a large apartment complex near the university. a. related group of building b. complicated c. anxiety
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Migraine is commonly evoked by periods of prolonged wakefulness and extraordinary effort or by prolonged anxiety. It may be produced by medications that stimulate one or another of the subcortical systems. Descriptions of the so-called hypertensive headache have varied greatly, and although certain characteristics have been emphasized repeatedly, no specific symptom complex has been elaborated. Despite these defects in our knowledge, the relief of headache in the hypertensive individual has been used as a criterion for a good result whenever any new therapy or procedure has been introduced for the treatment of elevated blood pressure.
I. WORD STUDY
migraine (n) hypertensive (adj) to describe (v) despite (prep) complaint (n) civilized (adj) pathophysiology (n) to investigate (v) accumulation (n) concerning (prep) subjective (adj) sensation (n) benign (adj) self-limited disease hence (adv) autopsy (n) material (n) / 'migrein / / 'haip:'tensiv / / dis'kraib / / dis'pait / / km'pleint / / 'si:vilaizd / / 'p ,fizi'ldzi / / in'vestigeit / / ,kju:mju'lein / / kn's: ni / / sb'dektiv / / sen'sein / / bi'nain / / self limitid / / hens / / ':tpsi / / m'tiril / chng au na u (thuc) chng cao huyt p. m t bt chp, mc d bnh, s au, than phin c vn ha, vn minh sinh l bnh iu tra, nghin cu s tch lu v, v vic ch quan cm gic nh (bnh), lnh (u) bnh t khi do gii phu thi th ti liu, bnh phm
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proportion (n) to consult (v) presumably (adv) to coexist (v) intermittent (adj) discomfort (n) to rely (v) numerous (adj) omnipresent (adj) proprietary (adj) remedy (n) anorexia (n) photophobia (n) weight gain (n) retention (n) fluid retention vascular (adj) to set down fair (adj) in the first place to presage (v) vasoconstriction (n) vasoconstrictor agent cranial (adj) in some fashion brief (adj) prolonged (adj) wakefulness (n) extraordinary (adj) effort (n) anxiety (n)
/ pr'p :n / / kn'slt / / pri'zju:mbli / / kouig'zist / / int'mitnt / / dis'kmft / / ri'lai / / 'nju: mrs / / ' mni'preznt / / pr'praitri / / remidi / / nou'reksi / / 'fout'foubi / / gein / / ri' tenn / / flu:id / / 'vskjul / / f / / 'presid / / veizou kn 'strikn / / 'kreinil / / 'fn / / bri:f / / pr'ld / / 'weikfulnis / / iks'tr:dnri / / 'eft / / 'zaiti /
phn, t l i khm bnh, hi kin c th on chng cng tn ti, chung sng tng cn, tng hi s kh chu tin, tin cy, da vo nhiu, ng c mt khp ni bit dc, thuc t thuc chng bing n, chng chn n chng s nh sng s tng cn s b (i), s gi li s gi nc (thuc) mch ghi li, chp li kh, hp l trc ht, trc nht bo trc s co tht mch thuc co mch (thuc) s mt mc no ngn, vn tt ko di s mt ng, s khng ng c c bit, l thng s c gng s lo lng, mi lo
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di v no s m t ci gi l s gin, s n gy ra, gi ln nhn mnh nhiu ln, nhc i nhc li mt tp hp, phc h complex (n) / 'kmpleks / thiu st, nhc im defect (n) / di'fekt / tiu chun criterion (n) / krai'tirin / a vo to introduce (v) / intr'dju:s / thi gian cch ly quanrantine / 'kwrntin / one or another of the subcortical systems : vng ny hay vng khc di v no subcortical (adj) description (n) so-called (adj) dilatation (n) to evoke (v) to emphasize (v) repeatedly (adj) specific symptom complex: Hi chng c trng
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...................................................................................................... ............................ 6. What is migraine characterized by? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 7. What is migraine commonly evoked by? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 8. What can headache? you say about the so-called hypertensive
...................................................................................................... ............................ 9. Has any specific symptom complex concerning hypertensive headache elaborated? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 10. What has been used as a criterion for a good result in the treatment for hypertensive headache? ...................................................................................................... ............................
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...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 4. The relief of headache in the hypertensive individual has been used as a criterion for a good result of the treatment. ...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... ........................................................ 5. Quarantine is the limitation of freedom of movement of persons who have been exposed to communicable diseases. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 6. Shocked patients who have resumed (= have begun again) breathing often later stop breathing and must therefore be watched closely. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................ 7. After the operation had been performed the patient was taken to the ward. ...................................................................................................... ............................ 8. Before the operation began the instruments had been thoroughly boiled. ...................................................................................................... ............................ 9. The operation will have been finished by 12 oclock.
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...................................................................................................... ............................
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3. Chng au na u, hay t nht xu hng mc chng au na u thng xut hin nhng ngi c cng huyt thng. ........... ... ........... ... 4. Ph n mc chng au na u nhiu hn nam gii. ...................................................................................................... ............................
Lesson ten
DISEASES AND INJURIES OF THE SKULL CONCUSSION OF THE BRAIN. In severe head injury, for example, blows on the head, the head striking against the pavement during a fall in the street, a fall from a height, etc., very frequently no injuries to the skull are found, but the patient develops a characteristic picture of concussion of the brain. Concussion of the brain being one of the most serious results of trauma, those who are nearby must seek immediate medical help. 77
At the moment the injury is sustained or immediately after it, the patient loses consciousness. He produces the impression of a person who is fast asleep, breathing evenly and deeply, answering no questions and not reacting to light stimuli. This condition is frequently accompanied by vomiting and involuntary urination and lasts several minutes, half an hour, and sometimes longer. Then the patient gradually recovers consciousness, but often feels weak and dizzy, has a headache and buzzing in the ears. Having regained consciousness the patient cannot recall what happened. Complete unconsciousness at the moment the injury is sustained; vomiting and amnesia are the most characteristic signs of concussion of the brain. CONTUSION OF THE BRAIN. In contusions of the brain multiple hemorrhages are observed at points corresponding to the side of the blow or on the opposite side. In addition to hemorrhages, crushing of the brain substance with subsequent softening of its tissue is possible. This picture of the disease at first resembles that of concussion of the brain, but the phenomena do not disappear within a few days as they do in cases of concussion of the brain, but increase and focal symptoms appear (paresis, paralyses, convulsive twitchings). Contusions of the brain run different courses depending on the localization and extent of destruction of the brain tissue. Patients with contusion of the brain must be ensured complete rest for a long period of time and must be administered sedatives, the treatment and care of them being generally the same, as in concussion of the brain. I. WORD STUDY
concussion (n) / kn'kn / chn ng
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of
chn ng no (c) nh, p, ging p vo, va vo ng t trn cao xung thc, tri gic mt thc, m ng thip i nhanh u u, u i tm phn ng li (s) i i, i tiu i dm d nh li chng qun chn dp chn dp no chy mu nhiu ch im, ch s dp nt cht no nhn, nhuyn sau , n sau ging vi, ging nh triu chng ti ch lit nh t lit (thuc) co git chng co git tin trin khc nhau
to strike against (v) a fall from a height consciousness (n) to lose consciousness to be fast asleep evenly (adv) to seek (v) to react (v) urination (n) involuntary urination to recall (v) amnesia (n) contusion (n) contusion of the brain multiple hemorrhages point (n) crushing (n) brain substance softening (n) subsequent to resemble (v) focal symptoms: paresis (n)
/ / / / / / / /
/ / / /
/ p'ri:sis 'prisis / paralysis (n)(pl.-ses) / p'rlisis / convulsive (adj) / kn'vlsiv / convulsive twitching / 'twiti / to run different / 'k:siz / courses
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extent (n) destruction (n) to ensure (v) sedative (n) to have buzzing in the ears to recover or to regain
/ / / / /
consciousness (v)
to seek immediate medical help : tm thy thuc cp cu a most serious result : mt hu qu rt trm trng
................................................................................................... 8. What are the most characteristic signs of concussion of the brain? ................................................................................................... 9. What is observed in contusions of the brain?
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................................................................................................... 10. What does the picture of contusion of the brain resemble at first? ................................................................................................... 11. Why do contusions of the brain run different courses? ................................................................................................... 12. What are the treatment and care of patients with concussion and contusion of the brain? ...................................................................................................
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.. ........ .. 5. Contusion of the brain running different courses, patients with such a trauma must be ensured complete rest for a long period of time. .. . ........ . 6. Ensured complete rest and treatment with sedatives, the above mentioned patients will recover completely. .. ........ .. 7. When the temperature of the body rises above normal the condition then existing is known as fever, and it is usually accompanied by quickened pulse and respiration, and disordered secretions. .. .. ........... ... 8. The onset of fevers may be abrunt or gradual, those of sudden onset being frequently characterized by chills, acute pain, headache, and sometimes accompanied by vomiting, while those of gradual onset are characterized by headache, uneasiness, weariness, loss of appetite, general malaise, etc., as well as by chilly sensations. .. .. .. ..
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................. .....
V. GAP - FILLING
The patient who has (1).................. a crushing injury often has other severe injuries. In addition (2)................tissue damage from compression, he will die from shock (3)....................lost plasma and blood are replaced promptly. At the same (4)................, pain and anxiety should be (5).................by the administration of suitable drugs.
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There are some patients with injuries to the nose. The frequent injuries to the nose are fractures of the nasal (6).......................... . Signs of (7)....................... of the nasal bones are pain in the region of the bridge of the nose, hemorrhage from the (8)........................ and its deformation. The wounds of the soft parts of the head and face are very dangerous because (9)....................the rich blood supply to the face and the skin of the skull. The basic method of treating such wounds consists in an operation and suturing as soon after the injuries as (10)..................
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All patients are admonished to stop smoking. Numerous techniques are utilized, always including a frank statement that smoking is unquestionably harmful. But success in stopping smoking is low. More than 90 million persons in America use tobacco in one form or another (pipes, cigars), approximately 72 million of them smoke cigarettes. With all of the publicity, it is hardly likely that anyone is unaware that there is a great deal of evidence that smoking may be hazardous to health. Nevertheless, the overwhelming majority of these people continue to smoke and it cannot be expected that they will give up smoking, even if cigarette package contains a warning, Smoking may impair your health.
I. Word study
cigarette (n) exception (n) literature (n) association (n) accumulating (adj) accumulating evidence mention(n/v) striking (adj) to evidence (v) mortality (n) mortality rate appreciably (adv) emphysematous (adj) subject (n) vulnerable(adj) irritant(n) to tend(n) / / / / / sig'ret / ik'sepn / 'litrt, 'litrit / sousi'ein / 'kiu:mjuleiti / thuc l iu ngoi ra, ngoi l ti liu mi lin quan, lin i chng cht nhng chng c chng cht cp, ni n ni bt, r rt chng minh, cho thy s t vong t l t vong r rt (thuc ) kh thng ngi, i tng d b tn thng cht kch thch c khuynh hng
/ / / / / / / / / / /
'menn / 'straiki / 'evidns / m:'tliti / reit / 'pri:ibli / emfi'si:mts / 'sbdikt / 'vlnrbl / 'iritnt / tend /
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to aggravate(v) airway(n) resistance(n) habitual(adj) smoker(n) nonsmoker(n) ex-smoker(n) postmortem(adj) application(n) mucosa(n) to admonish(v) technique(n) to utilize(v) frank(adj) statement unquestionably(ad v) tobacco(n) pipe(n) cigar(n) publicity(n) unaware(adj) nevertheless(adv) to expect(v) package(n) warning(n) to impair(v) hazardous overwhelming (adj)
/ 'grveit / / / / / / / / / / / / 'wei / ri'zistns / h'bitjul / 'smouk / 'nn 'smouk / 'eks 'smouk / 'poust'm:tm / pli'kein / mju'kous / d'mni / tek'ni:k /
/ 'ju:tilaiz / / frk / / 'steitmnt / / n'kwetnbli / / / / / / / / / / / / / t'bkou / paip / si'ga: / pb'lisiti / n'w / nev'les / inks'pekt / 'pkid / 'w:ni / im'p / 'hzds / ouv'welmi /
lm nng thm, trm trng thm kh o sc cn, cn tr nghin nng, thng xuyn ngi nghin thuc l ngi khng nghin thuc l ngi b thuc l sau khi cht s bi vo, s p vo nim mc, mng nhy khuyn rn, rn bo th thut, phng php, k thut dng, s dng thng, bc trc li tuyn b, li ni khng cn nghi ng thuc l tu thuc iu x g s tuyn truyn rng ri khng bit, khng hay tuy nhin, tuy th m mong, trng mong, ch i bao, gi, kin li rn, li bo trc lm suy yu may ri p o, ln t
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ni-c-tin
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..... .
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.. ........ .. 7. Great care must be taken to never cough or sneeze in the presence of other persons without first covering the mouth and nose. .. ........ .. 8. Flies may transmit many diseases by having access to discharges containing infectious microorganisms. .. ........ ..
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This money counts the wages from people (8)...............die of cancer at young age and stop (9)................taxes. This does not count fire started by cigarettes, (10)...............kill fifteen hundred people yearly and injure (11).................four thousand. Smoking costs every man, woman and child in the UK from one hundred (12)...............ten to two hundred and fifty pounds each year in the lost work and (13).................when you add another fifty to one hundred and fifty pounds yearly in insurance cost, that comes to one hundred and sixty to four hundred and ten pounds. If every one stopped (14) .................., a family(15)...........have up to one thousand six hundred and forty pounds more a year.
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All organ transplants are difficult to perform successfully. Consequently, surgeons perform them only when the patient is dying. However, when the operation is successful, the patient can live an almost normal life. Organ transplants are not easy. There are several major problems. First, the doctor must have a donor. A donor is a person who gives an organ for an operation. Donor organs may come from people who have just died or are still alive and well. Heart or lung donors must be people who have died, but who had healthy hearts and lungs. Another transplant problem is the danger of infection. When surgeons operate, bacteria enter the body and cause infection. The third problem is rejection. The human body naturally rejects, or does not accept, tissue from another body. The blood produces antibodies, which kill the new tissue. Rejection of the new tissue or organ is the major reason for the failure of transplant operations. Doctors are developing drugs that will stop rejection and increase the number of successful operations. Dr. Christian Barnard performed the first heart transplant in 1967 in South Africa. Since then, there have been many successful operations. A number of patients have lived for more than four years after successful surgery. Kidney and heart transplants are successful due to and lung machines and kidney machines, which keep patients alive during the operation. A kidney machine is a large machine that works like a real kidney because it clears the blood. Patients must use it several times a week. Until 1982, surgeons used heart and lung machines only during operations. However, in 1982, Dr. Barney Clark of Salt Lake city, Utah, received the first artificial heart. It was nothing like the large heart and lung machines, which surgeons used for operations. It was a small, plastic pump. Dr. Clark lived for about four months after the operation with the artificial heart inside him. Transplant surgery has helped many people. It has saved people with bad burns. It has helped blind people to see again. It
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has saved the lives of people who have kidney and heart diseases. There are problems with transplant surgery, but doctors are finding new ways to solve them. There will certainly be more successful transplant surgery in the future.
I. WORD STUDY
transplant (v,n) transplantation (n) tissue (n) cornea (n) donor (n) recipient (n) accept (v) consequently (adv) infection (n) rejection (n) antibody (n) failure (n) due to (adv) machine (n) pump (n,v) artificial (adj) naturally (adv) / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / trnsplnt / trnspln'tein / 'tiu: / 'k:ni / 'doun / risipint / k'sept / 'knskwentli / infekn / ridekn / 'ntibdi / 'feilj / dju: tu: / m'i:n / pmp / a:tifil / 'ntrli / cy ghp s cy ghp m gic mc ngi hin, ngi cho ngi nhn chp nhn bi vy, kt qu l s nhim trng s o thi khng th s tht bi nh, bi my bm nhn to t nhin
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4. Surgeons perform many operations to transplant parts of the body. a. assist b. educate c. harm d. do 5. A lung transplant provides the patient with a new lung. a. causes b. checks c. gives d. injures 6. The human body rejects, or does not accept, tissue from another person. a. does not accept b. does not eject c. accepts d. keeps 7. Because cornea transplants are usually successful, there have been a number of them. a. few b. many c. not many d. two 8. Heart and lung machines keep heart patients alive during operations. a. living b. dead c. happy d. awake 9. Organ transplants are not always successful. Consequently, surgeons perform them only when the patient is dying. a. but b. and c. or d. so
V. TIME EXPRESSIONS
Read the following sentences. Pay attention to the verb and its tense. Circle the time expression that goes with the verb. 1. Dr. Barnard performed the first heart transplant ...................... a. about twenty years c. now ago d. until now b. since 1967 2. Doctors are finding ways to solve these problems...................... a. five years ago c. now b. since 1980 d. until now 3. Transplant surgery has helped many people...................... a. two years ago c. now
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b. in the past d. last year 4. Barney Clark received the first artificial heart...................... a. now c. in 1982 b. always d. since 1982 5. The first skin transplant was in India...................... a. sometimes c. now b. since 600 d. 2600 years ago
VI. MODALS
May, must, can, and will are modals. A modal works with verbs to add meaning to the verb. Read the following sentences and guess the meaning of the modals. 1. After successful cornea transplants, blind patients can see again. a. are able to c. try to b. is necessary d. do not 2. There must be a donor for a heart transplant. a. It is a good idea c. It is not possible b. It is necessary d. Both b and c 3. The donor kidney may come from someone in the patients family, when the donor organ is not from someone in the same family, the body often rejects it. a. It is necessary c. It is not possible b. It is possible d. Both b and c 4. There will be more surgery in the future. a. It is not possible c. In the future b. It is not necessary d. now
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including the vasomotor ones. As the result, vascular tone diminishes, the internal vessels in the abdominal cavity dilate and accumulate a lot of blood, so that the peripheral arterial system is drained of blood hence the blood pressure drops and shock develops.
I. WORD STUDY
shock (n) stock-still (adj) to moan (v) indifferent (adj) immovable (adj) to gaze (v) distance (n) corpse (n) thread (n) his pulse is like a thread under his breath audible (adj) whisper (n) to display (v) contraction (n) facial (adj) to pass off (v) to persist (v) to persist unchanged essence (n) genesis (n) experimental (adj) to warrant (v) assumption (n) / k / / 'stk'stil / / moun / / in'difrnt / / im'mu:vbl / / geiz / / 'distns / / k:ps / / red / chong, sc khng nhc nhch, bt ng rn, rn r th , khng bt ng nhn chm chm pha xa, ng xa xc cht ch, si ch mch anh ta ch cn l mch ch nh, qua hi th c th nghe thy ting ni thm th hin , l ra s co rt , s co (thuc) mt bin mt, mt i vn vn khng i bn cht, thc cht cn nguyn, ngun gc da trn th nghim thc nghim cho php, m bo gi thuyt, tha nhn
/ ':dibl / / 'wisp / / dis'plei / / kn'trkn / / 'feil / / pa:s / / p 'sist / / 'esns / /'denisis / /esk peri'mentl / / 'wrnt / / 'smpn /
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leading (adj) / 'li:di / chnh, quan trng, ch o teaching (n) / 'ti:ti / hc thuyt exhaustion (n) / ig' z:stn / tnh trng kit sc cerebral (adj) / 'seribrl / (thuc) no cortex (x) / 'k:teks / v no, v influence (n) / 'influns / nh hng under the influence do nh hng to attach importance to coi trng intoxication (n) / in tksi'kein / s lm nhim c overstrain (n) / ouvs'trein / s gng qu sc starvation (n) / sta: 'vein / s i n, s i, s thiu n cooling (n) / 'ku:li / s gim th nhit insomnia (n) / in'smni / s mt ng emotional (adj) / i'mounl / xc ng experience (n) / iks'pirins / s tri qua emotional experience s xc ng mnh stimulation (adj) / stimu'lein / s kch thch to transmit (v) / trnz'mit / truyn to excite (v) / ik'sait / kch thch to express (v) / di'pres / c ch vitally important ti quan trng vasomotor (adj) / 'veizou'mout / vn mch vascular (adj) / 'vskjul / (thuc) mch vascular tone trng lc mnh to dilate (v) /dai'leit / lm gin to accumulate (v) / 'kju:mjuleit / tch li, tch lu hence / hens / do to drop (v) / drp / st, gim to drain (v) / drein / lm kit, rt ht, dn lu he either answers no questions at all: anh ta hoc khng tr li cu hi no c to see a wouded soldier lying stock- still : nhn thy mt ngi lnh b thng nm bt ng.
1. What do we call shock? .. ................ 2. When is shock particularly dangerous? .............. .... 3. How does it end in many cases? ..................... ..... 4. By whom was the description of shock made? ........................ ...... 5. What is the clinical picture of a patient in shock like? ........................ ...... 6. How does the patient display a sign of sensation? ..................... ..... 7. When does this state of the patient pass off? And what may occur if it does not? ........... ...................................................................................................... ............................... 8. What assumption do experimental data warrant? ................. ..... 9. On what basis is the problem of the genesis of shock solved? ........................ ...... 10. What stimuli may cause shock? ..................... .....
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11. Can you describe the mechanism of the development of shock? ........................ ......
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6. Grippe is a highly communicable and rapidly spreading disease, all ages being liable to it, especially children. .. .............. 7. Some palpable mass in the epigastria having been revealed at the physical examination, the surgeon made a second X-ray examination. ....................................................................................................... ....................................................................................................... 8. The barium meal having showed signs of a large mass displacing the stomach to left, laparotomy was indicated. .. .. ........
V. Translate in to English.
1. Phn ln chong pht trin l do gng qu sc, mt ng, i n, gim th nhit...
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................................................................................................................................. ... 2. Chong l mt trong nhng bin chng trm trng nht sau nhng ca i phu thut, sau khi b bng rng hoc b chn thng, .. .......... 3. Trng thi chong c nh phu thut ni ting N.I.Pirogov m t. ...... 4.Vn cn nguyn ca chong c gii quyt trn c s hc thuyt ca I.P.Pavlov. ..... . .......................................................................................................
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It is an amazing idea that there is a cure for sudden death. It is equally amazing that this magic is not done by todays high technology. Any ordinary person can do it. You use your own lungs to breathe into the patients mouth and start his or her lungs working. You push on the heart with your hands to make it start beating again. It is as easy as that. The heart is a large muscle that pumps blood through the arteries. It is located in the center of the chest behind the breastbone. The lungs are at either side of the heart. Air enters the nose and mouth and moves through the airway to the lungs, bringing oxygen into the body. As the blood moves through the lungs, it picks up the oxygen and carries it to the cells throughout the body. At the same time that the blood picks up the oxygen, it leaves carbon dioxide as a waste material, and the lungs breathe it out through the airway. When the heart stops beating, or a person stops breathing, this whole process stops. No oxygen is taken into the body, and the blood doesnt move through the arteries. CPR can start the process moving again. There are several situations where CPR is needed. It can be used when a person has a heart attack and the heart stops. A heart attack occurs when the heart cannot get enough oxygen. This usually happens because one of the two arteries to the heart has become narrow or completely blocked. The heart muscle cells that are supplied with oxygen by that artery die because they stop receiving oxygen. One of the symptoms of a heart attack is a feeling of pressure and tightness or aching in the center of the chest. It lasts longer than two minutes, and it may come and go. The person having a heart attack may also starts sweating, feel weak, be short of breath, and feel like vomiting. However, there may be no symptoms at all; the heart may stop suddenly and the person stops breathing. If CPR is started immediately, it may bring the person back to life.
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Electric shock is another situation where CPR can be used. If enough electricity enters the body, the person dies immediately. CPR can resuscitate the person. An electric shock usually happens to someone who has been working carelessly with electricity. It can also be caused if lightning strikes a person. A third situation is drowning, or dying in the water, which happens most often in the summer when many people go swimming. Children can also drown when they are left alone near a swimming pool. A person trained in CPR can help a person start to breathe after clearing the water of the airway. These are the three most common causes of sudden death when CPR can be used. There are others less common. Someone in a burning building may breathe in too much smoke and not get any oxygen into the lungs. Some people have an intense reaction to certain drugs or to the sting of a bee or some other insect, and the heart and lungs stop functioning. CPR is an example of first aid. An ordinary can take a first aid class and learn what to do until the patient receives professional help. This might mean helping someone until an ambulance comes. The professionals can use their equipment to take charge of the patient. Or it might mean giving first aid and then taking the patient to a doctor. CPR can keep a person alive until he or she reaches a hospital. When you give CPR, you breathe directly into the patients mouth. Then you press on the heart in the center of the chest. You continue alternating these two actions. CPR is easy to learn, but you shouldnt learn it from a book. You should receive instruction in a class where you practice in front of the teacher until you do it correctly. As you know, if the brain is without oxygen for four minutes, there will be permanent brain damage. It is necessary to start CPR immediately when a person stops breathing, or as soon as possible. You have to know how to do it quickly and well. If someone in your family has heart trouble, if you go swimming a lot, or if you plan to work with electricity, you
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should learn CPR. In fact, everyone should learn it, in case they ever need it. Where can you learn it? The Red Cross has CPR classes, many hospitals teach it, and so do some university student health centers. If there are no classes where you live, ask the Red Cross or a nearby hospital to organize a class. CPR is worth learning. It can give you the chance to save someones life.
I. WORD STUDY
cardio (adj) pulmonary (adj) resuscitation (n) to resuscitate (v) amazing (adj) magic (n) technology (n) to breathe (v) artery (n) breastbone (n) airway (n) oxygen (n) carbon dioxide (phr) / 'ka:di / / 'plmnri / / rissi 'tein / / ri 'ssiteit / / 'meizi / / 'mdik / / tek 'nldi / / bri: / / 'a:tri / / 'brestboun / / 'ewei / / 'ksidn / / 'ka:bn daiksaid / heart attack (phr) / ha:t 'tk / to block (v) / blk / to sweat (v) / swet / electric shock (phr) / i 'lektrik k / lightning (n) / 'laitni / to strike (v) / straik / to drown (v) / draun / intense reaction / in'tens rikn / (phr) sting (n,v) / sti / (thuc) tim (thuc) phi s lm hi sinh lm tnh li kinh ngc php k diu k thut h hp, th ng mch xng c kh o kh xy kh cacbon ixit au tim lm tc v m hi c in git tia chp, st nh cht ui phn ng mnh chm, t
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thay phin, lun phin permanent brain damage (phr) : tn thng no vnh vin to give sb the chance to do smt : to cho ai c hi lm g to save someone's life : cu sng tnh mng cho ai
to function (v) professional (n) to take charge of... (phr) to keep sb alive (phr) to alternate (v)
'laiv /
/ ':ltneit /
II. VOCABULARY
Complete each sentence with one word or phrase from the box. resuscitatio n ambulance breastbone so located first aid process in case pump react drown process strike lungs function reaction chest shock take charge so
1. The heart is directly behind the... 2. Village people often have to water by hand. 3. Volcanoes are.. in chains and clusters. 4. Hail and snow are formed by a similar 5. The...................... of the heart is to pump blood through the arteries. 6. Children should wear a life preserver when they are around water so they can't .................. 7. Anyone can learn to give...................You don't have to be a doctor or a nurse.
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8. The R in CPR stands for........................ 9. The..................are in the chest and ..............................is the heart. 10. An electric................ can kill a person. 11. An ................... is used to take patients to a hospital. 12. A strong....................to a drug can kill a person. 13. Edward volunteered to .....................of arranging food for the party. 14. Handwriting analysis handwriting in order to is a ..................... of studying
understand the person who wrote it. 15. You cannot save up sleep ahead of time.......................you need it later.
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6. .... 7. .... 8. .... 9. .... 10. .... 11. .... 12. ....
nightmare ................... confused ................... adolescent ................... permanently ................... sore ................... dawn ................... position ...................
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to an insect sting. ...........8. First aid is an example of CPR. ...........9. Everyone should get a book about CPR and learn how to do it. ...........10. You should call an ambulance before you start CPR.
V. COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS.
1. What is the function of the lungs? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 2. What are the symptoms of a heart attack? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 3. What are the three most common situations where CPR is needed? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 4. What is the first aid? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 5. How can CPR prevent brain damage? ...................................................................................................... ............................ 6. What professionals work with patients? ...................................................................................................... ............................
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...................................................................................................... ............................ 2. Khi tin hnh hi sc tim phi, bn cn thay i gia h hi trc tip vo ming bnh nhn v p ln tim gia lng ngc ca bnh nhn. ...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... ........................................................ 3. Mt ngi b t t do au tim, do in git hay b cht ui cn phi c tin hnh hi sc tim phi ngay lp tc. ...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... ........................................................ 4. Hi sc tim phi d hc. Bn khng nn hc qua sch v m bn nn tip thu s hng dn ca gio vin. Sau bn phi luyn tp cho n khi bn c th tin hnh mt cch nhanh chng v chun xc. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... ........................................................ 5. Cng c nhiu ngi khng chuyn nghnh y bit tin hnh c hi sc tim phi th cng tt. ...................................................................................................... ............................ ...................................................................................................... ............................
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Lesson 15 : NATURAL MEDICINE Doctor in India and China are famous for their knowledge of medicine plants, but healers in many countries all over the world use natural medicine. Many modern drugs come from a few of thousands of plants with medicinal uses. For example, aloe is good for skin. It helps minor burns, such as sunburn. Camomile and sage teas are good for stomach problems. Mint or ginger teas often relax people. There is new interest in natural medicine all over the world. Scientists want to learn more about medicinal plants and their uses. The World Health Organization (WHO) has a program to study natural medicines in many countries. For hundreds of years, native healers used plants to help the sick. Natural medicines, such as the opium poppy or the outside bark of the cinchona tree from South America, were common. Then in the 1800s, pharmacists recognized their value and began to study them. In 1803s, Friedrich Sherburne took morphine from the opium poppy . He was the first pharmacist to extract a drug from a plant. Later, scientists extracted quinine, which is a treatment for malaria, from the cinchona bark. Since then, scientists have extracted natural drugs from many plants. They found aspirin in willow bark tea, which is a natural treatment for headaches. Scientists have studied medicinal plants and used, the knowledge to make synthetic drugs for some natural drugs that are not always common or easy to get. At the present, pharmacists and physicians are studying drugs from different plants to treat cancer. Many of these natural drugs are effective in the treatment of cancer. Many different kinds of scientists, such as physicians, biologists, and anthropologists, are studying medicinal plants. One kind of scientist who specializes in collecting medicinal plants is the ethnobotanist. Ethnobotanist study groups of people and their medicines. They travel to many places, such as South America and Africa , where there are 113
thousands of medicinal plants. They live with the native people and learn how the people use these plants. Then th ethnobotanist bring the plants back to the laboratory where other scientists extract and study the drugs in them. These studies are helping doctors find new cures for many diseases.
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