题目内容

首选检查方法是

A. B超
B. 十二指肠低张造影
C. 选择性腹腔动脉造影
D. 穿刺活检术
E. 胃镜

查看答案
更多问题

关于急性肺栓塞的诊断,下列选项不正确的是

A. 二聚体增加提示肺栓塞的可能,D-二 聚体正常具有除外肺栓塞的价值
B. 进行肺通气灌注扫描时,应常规进行下 肢静脉的核素检查
CT肺动脉成像和肺动脉造影对肺栓塞的 诊断价值基本相当
D. 血气分析常常显示为呼吸性碱中毒
ECG出现SIQⅢTⅢ是肺栓塞的确诊指标

X线示骨质破坏伴死骨形成见于

A. Ewin9肉瘤
B. 骨样骨瘤
C. 骨肉瘤
D. 内生软骨瘤
E. 骨结核

A.The woman should not get involved in the situation.B.The woman should not be an

A. The woman should not get involved in the situation.
B. The woman should not be angry with he friends.
C. He wants to talk to Sally and Mark.
D. He will explain to the woman what happened.

Gadgets with a Sporting Chance Consumer electronics: New sports equipment, from tennis rackets to running shoes, uses processing power to enhance performance. Is that fair? Why should aspiring athletes stand on the sidelines when a spot of electronic assistance can put them in the middle of the game? That is the question many sports-equipment makers are asking as they sense an opportunity to boost their sales with high-tech products. You could call it the revenge of the nerds: a new wave of microchip-equipped sporting goods promises to enhance the performance of novices and non-sporting types alike--and could even make difficult sports easier. Take cross-country skiing. Victor Petrenko, an engineer at Dartmouth Colleges Ice Research Lab in New Hampshire, has invented some smart ski-brakes that, he believes, will increase the popularity of cross-country skiing by making the sport less challenging for beginners. The brakes, currently being tested by a ski manufacturer in the Alps, offer the necessary friction for a bigger "kick-off force" and make the skis less likely to slide backwards in their trucks. To make this happen, an electric current from the bottom of the skis pulses through the ice, melting a thin layer of snow that instantly refreezes and acts as a sort of glue. This is not the only form. of smart ski to hit the slopes. Atomic, a leading ski-maker based in Austria, plans to introduce a system later this year that runs a diagnostic safety check to ensure that the ski binding is properly closed, with the result being shown on a tiny built-in liquid-crystal display. Meanwhile, tennis equipment manufacturers are hoping that innovation will bring new zip to their business as well. They certainly need to do something: according to Sport ScanInfo, a market-research firm based in Florida, sales of tennis rackets in America fell 12.5% during the first half of 2004 compared with the first half of 2003. With the ball clearly in their court, researchers at Head, a maker of sporting equipment, have devised a product that should appeal to players suffering from tennis elbow. A chip inside the racket controls piezo-electric fibres, which convert mechanical energy from the balls impact into electrical potential energy. This energy is then used to generate a counter-force in the piezo-electric fibres that causes a dampening effect. All of this, the firm says, translates into less stress on the elbow. Head claims that residual vibrations in the racket are dampened twice as fast as in conventional rackets, reducing the shock experienced by the players arm by more than 50%. No doubt purists will object that this is simply not cricket. Rule-makers in many sports are now being forced to consider the implications of equipment that promises to augment athletes performance with electronic muscle. The International Tennis Federation, that body is responsible for setting the rules of the game, has specified in its most recent guidelines that "no energy source that in any way changes or affects the playing characteristics of a racket may be built into or attached to a racket". Yet despite such wording, the guideline does not actually eliminate the use of Heads smart rackets, because there is no external energy source---the damping effect relies solely on energy from the balls impact. Though high-tech equipment may cause controversy on the court, tennis clubs have to adhere to the guidelines set for the sport, explains Stuart Miller, the ITFs technical manager. And if the rules allow self-generated forces to modify a rackets response, so be it. A Different sports have encountered different technologies, though the future will undoubtedly bring more overlap. B In golf, gadgets that pinpoint the location of the green using the Global Positioning System (GPS), C The rule-making body of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, which oversees the game in all countries except America and its dependencies, currently prohibits the use of distance-measuring devices. D As a result, golfers cannot rely on GPS aids in a tournament. While technological innovation in golf equipment should continue, the players skill should remain the predominant factor, says David Rickman, who is in charge of the clubs rules and equipment standards. The trend towards high-tech assistance is not limited to sports with a reputation for expensive gear, however. Even runing, that most basic of sports, provides scope for electronic enhancement. The Adidas running shoe, which is due to be launched in December, incorporates a batterypowered sensor that takes about 1,000 readings a second. A microprocessor then directs a tiny embedded electric motor to adjust the characteristics of the sneaker, enableing it to change the degree of cushioning depending on the surface conditions and the wearers running style. and foot position. The race for the smartest use of microchips in sporting equipment, it seems, has begun.
The word novices in paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to

A. beginner.
B. nerd.
C. sales.
D. listener.

答案查题题库