首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
医学
Neuroscientists now understand at least some of the physiology behind a wide range of unconscious states, from deep sleep to com
Neuroscientists now understand at least some of the physiology behind a wide range of unconscious states, from deep sleep to com
admin
2015-01-26
6
问题
Neuroscientists now understand at least some of the physiology behind a wide range of unconscious states, from deep sleep to coma, from partially conscious conditions to a persistent vegetative state, the condition diagnosed in Ms. Schiavo.
New research, by laboratories in New York and Europe, has allowed for much clearer distinctions to be made between the uncounted number of people who at some time become comatose, the 10,000 to 15,000 Americans who subsist in vegetative states and the estimated 100,000 or more who exist in states of partial consciousness.
This emerging picture should make it easier for doctors to judge which brain-damaged patients have some hope of recovering awareness, experts say, and already it is providing clues to the specific brain processes that sustain conscious awareness.
"Understanding what these processes are will give us a better sense of how to help the whole range of people living with brain injuries," said Dr. Nicholas Schiff, an assistant professor of neurology and neuroscience at NewYork-Presbyterian / Weill Cornell hospital. "That is where this field is ultimately headed: toward a better understanding of what consciousness is."
The most familiar unconscious state is sleep, which in its deepest phases is characterized by little electrical activity in the brain and almost complete unresponsiveness. Coma, the most widely known state of impaired unconsciousness, is in fact a continuum. Doctors rate the extent to which a comatose person shows pain responses and reactions to verbal sounds on a scale from 3, for no response, to 13, for consistent responses.
As in sleep, people in comas may move or make sounds and typically have no memory of either. But they almost always emerge from this state in two to three weeks, doctors say, when the eyes open spontaneously. What follows is critical for the person’s recovery.
Those who are lucky, or who have less severe injuries, gradually awaken. "The first thing I remember was telling my ex-boyfriend, who was at the foot of the bed, to shut up," said Trisha Meili, who fell into a coma after being beaten and raped in 1990, and wrote about the experience in the book, I Am the Central Park Jogger.
In the days after this memory, Ms. Meili said, she slipped in and out of conscious awareness, "as if my body was taking care of the most important things first, and leaving my moment to moment awareness for last."
In fact, researchers say, this is precisely what happens. The primitive brain stem, which controls sleep-wake cycles as well as reflexes, asserts itself first, as the eyes open. Ideally, areas of the cerebral cortex, the seat of conscious thought, soon follow, like lights flicking on in the upper rooms of a darkened house.
But in some cases — Ms. Schiavo’s was one of them — the cortical areas fail to engage, and the patient’s prognosis becomes dire.
Neurologists were all but unanimous in diagnosing the condition of Ms. Schiavo, whose heart stopped temporarily in 1990, depriving her brain of oxygen. Brain cells and neural connections wither and die without oxygen, like marine life in a drained lake, leaving virtually nothing unharmed.
People with these kinds of injuries—Nancy Cruzan, whose case reached the Supreme Court in 1990 is an example — almost always remain unresponsive if they have not regained awareness in the first months after the injury.
In medical terms, they become persistently vegetative, a diagnosis first described in 1972 by Dr. Fred Plum of Cornell University and Dr. Bryan Jennett, a neurosurgeon at Glasgow University in Scotland. In a sense, the description of the diagnosis began the modern study of disorders of consciousness. "Before 1972 people talked about permanent comas, or irrecoverable comas, but we defined a different state altogether, with the eyes open, some reflex activity, but no sign of meaningful psychological responsiveness," Dr. Jennett, now a professor emeritus, said in an interview.
In an exhaustive review of the medical histories of more than 700 persistently vegetative patients, a team of doctors in 1994 reported that about 15 percent of those who suffered brain damage from oxygen deprivation, like Ms. Schiavo, recovered some awareness within three months. After that, however, very few recovered and none did so after two years.
About 52 percent of people with traumatic wounds to the head, often from car accidents, recovered some awareness in the first year after the injury, the study found; very few recovered after that. "It’s the difference between taking a blow to the brain, which affects a local area — and taking this global, whole-brain hit," said Dr. Joseph Fins, chief of the medical ethics division of NewYork-Presbyterian / Weill Cornell hospital.
Yet these statistics cannot explain the stories of remarkable recovery that surfaced during the debate over Ms. Schiavo’s fate. There was Terry Wallis, a mechanic in Arkansas who regained awareness in 2003, more than 18 years after he fell into unconsciousness from a car accident; Sarah Scantlin, a Kansas woman who, also a victim of a car accident, emerged from a similar state after 19 years; and several others, whose collective human spirit seemed to defy the experts, and trump science.
Researchers say these cases can be accounted for by recent studies that indicate the existence of yet another state of subdued responsiveness, one that represents a clear break from the vegetative.
The goal of researchers on unconscious states is______.
选项
A、to allow clearer distinctions to be rhade
B、to make it easier for doctors to make judgements
C、to gain a better understanding of what consciousness is
D、to help patients in comas emerge from this state
答案
C
解析
文章第四段主要阐述了神经学专家们研究的目标。根据Dr. Nicholas Schiff“Understandingwhat these processes are will give us a better sense of how to help the whole range of people livingwith brain injuries,that is where this field is ultimately headed:toward a better understanding ofwhat consciousness is.”(理解这些过程可以使我们更好的明白如何帮助那些大脑受伤的人,那也就是这个领域的最终目的:更好的理解意识是什么。)可知正确选项是C。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/D6T3777K
本试题收录于:
医学博士外语题库考研分类
0
医学博士外语
考研
相关试题推荐
Imagineadiseasespreadingacrosstheglobe,killingmostlymiddle-agedpeopleorleavingthemchronicallydisabled.Thenoned
High-speedlivinghasbecomeafactoflife,andthefranticpaceistakingitstoll,accordingtosciencewriterJamesGleick.
Cultureshockmightbecalledanoccupationaldiseaseofpeoplewhohavebeensuddenlytransplantedabroad.Likemostailments,
Cultureshockmightbecalledanoccupationaldiseaseofpeoplewhohavebeensuddenlytransplantedabroad.Likemostailments,
Cultureshockmightbecalledanoccupationaldiseaseofpeoplewhohavebeensuddenlytransplantedabroad.Likemostailments,
Thestrong,light-weightbamboomakesanexcellentreinforcementforconcrete.
A、Shedidpoorlyonphysics.B、ShegotaBinphysics.C、Shedidn’twantto.D、Shewasanaveragestudent.A女士讲到自己的物理只拿到了“D”,因而
A、Over700millions.B、Over400millions.C、Over2.3billions.D、Over3billion.A由文中2.3billionadultswillbeoverweightand
Theelementsotherthanhydrogenandheliumexistinsuchsmallquantitiesthatitisaccuratetosaythattheuniverseissomew
Alittleinformationisadangerousthing.Alotofinformation,ifit’sinaccurateorconfusingevenmoreso.Thisisaproblem
随机试题
如图,导体球壳半径为R,带电量为Q,其球心处有一带电量为q的点电荷,则球壳外距球心r处的电场强度大小为()[img][/img]
A.封闭细菌核糖体A位点B.抑制细菌核糖体移位C.两者皆有D.两者皆无四环素的功能是
A.空白对照B.实验对照C.标准对照D.自身对照E.相互对照
双侧髁突骨折后、出现移位伴开的合理治疗方法是A.单侧固定+颅颌弹性绷带B.颌间固定+弹性牵引C.单纯领间固定D.在双侧磨牙后区垫以2~3mm厚的橡皮垫,再用颅颌弹性绷带进行牵引E.手术切开复位固定
甲向乙发出要约,乙于3月8日发出承诺信函,3月10日承诺信函寄至甲,但甲的法定代表人当日去赈灾,3月11日才知悉该函内容,遂于3月12日致函告知乙收到承诺,该承诺的生效时间是()。
法的实施方式按()可以分为法的遵守、法的执行、法的适用。
对于实行核准制的企业投资项目,项目核准机构的部分工作内容包括:①委托评估;②受理申报;③核准决定;④征求公众意见和专家评议。上述工作正确的顺序是()。
[2000年第121题]某老年人照料设施建筑建筑内的楼梯设计,哪条是错的?
埋设在庭院内的地下燃气管道的最小覆土厚度不得小于()。
(2014年卷二第93题)张某欲将珍藏多年的古董瓷器转让给赵某。两人在合同中约定,如果一方违约,需要支付给对方违约金,同时约定赵某支付一定数额的定金给张某作为债权的担保。交付前,张某的朋友李某不慎将该瓷器摔碎。根据合同法及相关规定,下列哪些说法是正确的?
最新回复
(
0
)